This is an action on account for tbe value of a number of pockets or bags of rice scfld by tbe plaintiffs to tbe defendant. Tbe plaintiffs recovered in tbe circuit court and tbe defendant appeals, insisting that tbe court admitted incompetent evidence on the part of tbe plaintiffs. The evidence tended to prove that tbe defendant ordered fifty pockets or bags of rice from plaintiffs, who are wholesalers of that *125commodity doing business in the city of New Orleans. The rice was shipped over the Illinois Central railroad as initial carrier, to defendant at Neosho, Missouri, at which point he conducts a wholesale grocery store. The defendant received the rice, and upon examination, either that day or the next, discovered that sixteen hags of the same were spoiled. It seems that the rice had become saturated with oil, grease, or possibly water, so as to destroy its value. He refused to pay plaintiffs for the sixteen pockets mentioned, hence this suit. The case was tried to the judge without a jury. The theory advanced by the plaintiffs, as appears from the proof and the conduct of the case, was that the rice was sound and in good condition at.the time it was delivered to the Illinois Central Railroad Company for carriage and that such delivery, being to the usual and customary carrier, passed the title to the rice to defendant; that if the rice became saturated while in the carrier’s possession after delivery to it in good condition by the plaintiffs, the loss is the loss of the defendant and not one these plaintiffs should sustain. Now it is the established law that when goods are ordered and no specific instructions are given in regard to their shipment, as in this case, a delivery to the usual carrier for the purchaser with proper directions, is a constructive delivery to the purchaser, and the goods, immediately upon such delivery to the carrier, become the property of the purchaser, subject only to the right of stoppage in transitu. The purchaser by issuing general directions to ship, as in this case, authorizes the seller to ship in the usual way and renders the carrier the agent of the purchaser for the purpose, at least, of receiving the goods for carriage and operating a transfer of the ownership. [Comstock & Co. v. Affoelter, 50 Mo. 411; 24 Amer. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 1071-1072.] This being true, the important question in this case, therefore, is the condition of the *126rice at the time of its delivery to the carrier at New Orleans. The plaintiffs introduced two witnesses only. One of these was the plaintiff Oahn, the other the drayman who delivered the rice to the railroad station at New Orleans. Both gave evidence to the effect that it was in good condition when delivered to the railroad. It appears, however, that they made no careful inspection of the rice. Their testimony concerned rather its condition as it appeared in the sacks. Both of these witnesses were permitted to testify oyer the objections and exceptions of the defendant that upon delivery of the rice to the Illinois Central Railroad Company at New Orleans its agent issued a bill of lading therefor which recited that the rice was in good condition and was not damaged in any way when received by it; that there was no indorsement on the bill of lading that the rice was damaged, and in fact, the bill of lading was properly issued in clean form. One of those witnesses, Pabacher, the drayman, was permitted further to say, over the objection and exception of defendants!: “If the rice was not in good condition at the time of delivery to the Illinois Central Railroad, the agent would not have issued a clean bill of lading to me, but would have indorsed on the bill the condition in which the rice was at the time of delivery, such as wet, or damaged, or caked.” This evidence was hearsay and it should have been excluded. It implies that the railroad agent examined the rice pending the very act of delivery which passed title and found it to be in good order and sound. While the carrier may have been the agent of defendant upon delivery of the rice to it, it was clearly not his agent in that sense which would justify an admission on its part as to the soundness of the rice which would hind the defendant in a suit for the value thereof between the seller and buyer. The railroad company was the agent of defendant to receive and carry the rice hut was not his agent to inspect and pass upon the qual- - *127ity. As to that matter, the railroad company and its agent stood as any third party and the recitals in the bill of lading were wholly incompetent against the defendant for the reason they were hearsay as to him. It is a general principle of the law of evidence that hearsay from a person not a party to the-suit is not admissible because such person was not under oath and the opposite party had no opportunity to cross-examine him. [1 Greenleaf on Evidence (16 Ed.), secs. 98, 99, 99a; 14 Amer. and Eng. Ency, Law (2 Ed.), 309, 310; Chapman v. Chapman, 2 Conn. 348; Hoskins v. Railway, 19 Mo. App. 315; State v. Sutton, 64 Mo. 107.] If the evidence above referred to was important on the issue, and indeed it was vital, the plaintiffs should have taken the deposition of the railroad agent or have produced him in court and thus afforded the defendant an opportunity for cross-examination under the forms of law.
One of the plaintiffs was also permitted to testify over defendant’s objection and exception, that at the same time the shipment of rice was made to this defendant, plaintiff also made shipments of rice to other parties out of the same lots of rice in bulk in their warehouse and remittances were received therefor in due time without contention as to the condition and quality; and also that a few days before this shipment they had shipped the defendant a lot of rice out of the same bulk in one of their warehouses which he had accepted and paid for without complaint. This evidence certainly does not tend to throw light Upon the issue as to the condition of the rice involved in the present controversy at the time it was delivered to the carrier for the defendant and it should have been excluded. The evidence as to the shipments of rice to other parties, which were received by them without complaint, was wholly irrelevant as to the issues between the parties to this suit and appears highly prejudicial to de*128fendant’s rights. As to that pertaining to the shipments of rice to defendant from the same bulk a few days before the shipment involved here, it may be said that 'while the rice in bulk in plaintiffs’ warehouse may have been sound and in good order at that time, it may have been soaked by an overflow or otherwise, between that day and the date of the present shipment and thereby caused to mould. Even though there is some relaxation of strict rules on the reception of evidence when a case is tried before the judge without a jury, it would be unpardonable for an appellate court to condone the rulings above indicated. It appears the important and crucial question in the case was the condition of the rice at the time of the delivery to the carrier and to permit a judgment to stand which affirms the reception of such rank hearsay testimony as the bill of lading mentioned, would be highly prejudicial to the defendant’s rights.
For the reasons given, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.
Bland, P. J., and Goode, J., concur.