Northwestern Elevator Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co.
Northwestern Elevator Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought in the district court of Hennepin county by the plaintiff shipper against the defendant carrier to recover the-value of grain claimed to have been lost in various shipments from points in the western part of the state to Minneapolis. Sixty causes, of action were stated, each relating to a single car load shipment»
Section 2729, R. L. 1905, is as follows: “Every person engaged in any business requiring the use of weights or measures shall cause, those used by him to be tested and sealed by the county sealer. Every person who shall buy, sell, or dispose of any goods or commodities by an unsealed weight, measure, or scale kept by him, or shall knowingly use any such weight, measure, or scale which has beern sealed, but is incorrect, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor; but no contract of sale shall thereby be rendered void.”
The defendant sought and offered to prove that the hopper scales were not tested or sealed. An objection to this proof was sustained. It appears from the statements of the trial court, made repeatedly when different offers and objections were made, that the evidence was refused because it was sought to exclude the weights as evidence, and that it might be received for the purpose of affecting the accuracy of the scales, if so desired. The question, then, is whether the fact that the plaintiff’s hopper scales were not tested or sealed prevented the use in evidence of the weights which they recorded, for otherwise the offered evidence was immaterial. We hold that it did not.
The plaintiff was shipping its own grain to itself. That one may use his own unsealed scales, for purposes of his own, without offending the statute, is not to be questioned. A farmer, selling grain or produce, may clearly enough weigh what he sells, on unsealed scales, and make use of the weights as evidence. There is no evidence that the plaintiff used its hopper scales in making sales. All the evidence is to the contrary; but, on cross-examination of one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, an objection was sustained to a question in
We have reached the conclusion that the statute did not intend to outlaw unsealed scales, used as these were, so that the weights which they recorded could not be used as evidence in a contest with the carrier as to shortages in shipments. The decision is confined to the precise question presented.
On cross-examination counsel for the plaintiff, having access to the train book, asked the conductor as to the showing of the train book of the condition of other cars, in the same train, but not consigned to the plaintiff, and found the record to show them without notation of defects. The plaintiff, in rebuttal, offered testimony of inspectors, examining the cars at inspection points, to show that such cars, they not being cars containing the plaintiff’s shipment, and not shown
The defendant’s contention, as it finally resolves itself, is that this was allowing an impeachment of its witnesses in a collateral matter, contrary to the well-known rule. We are unable to adopt this view. The defendant qualified its train hooks by its conductors; but the train books furnished the evidence, and not the conductors who read from them, except as they accredited them. The situation is, in substance, not different than it would have been had the train books been in evidence, instead of the conductor having them in his hand, telling what they contained. If they had been in evidence, there would be no doubt of the right to impeach them by showing specific errors. "'The untrustworthiness of the book may be evidenced by demonstrating specific errors in the entries.” 2 Wigmore, Evidence, § 1551.
We have been cited no case, and have found-none, nor have we searched far for one, holding the exact point now presented. The question is a novel one; but we apprehend that the rule of evidence applied by the trial court is so logical that its correctness is hardly subject to questioning.
The record is a long one. The evidence is not the same as to each shipment. The fact that the bills of lading were delivered to the shipper, showing certain weights, is some evidence of the correctness-of such weights. There was some evidence as to the accuracy of the hopper scales. The correctness of the weights at the terminal points is admitted. Much evidence was received tending to show that there was or was not a shortage. The evidence of the defendant did not necessarily negative a shortage. We have examined the record with care, and we think the evidence, which was carefully submitted to the jury, and which has satisfied the scrutiny of the trial court, sustains the verdict.
Order affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- NORTHWESTERN ELEVATOR COMPANY v. GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY
- Status
- Published