DeLisle v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad
DeLisle v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff instituted his action in the circuit court of New Madrid county against the defendant for damages alleged to have been sustained by him in consequence of the defendant’s failure to supply cars it had contracted to do in which to ship his cattle and that by reason of the delay in the supply of cars and in the shipment of the cattle, the cattle lost in weight and did not reach the market for sale at the time they should have done, had the defendant supplied the cars as contracted and agreed; that the market fell off and that plaintiff had suffered damages thereby, plaintiff laying his damages at $295. The answer was a general denial. The trial was before a court without a jury, a jury having been waived. At the request of defendant the court made a special finding of facts, which, in effect, after finding that the defendant was a corporation operating a railroad in this State from Portageville, Missouri, to East St. Louis, Illinois, and a common carrier of passengers and goods, finds that on a day in April, 1906, the plaintiff ordered from the defendant two cars for the shipment of cattle from Portageville to East St. Louis, and that the defendant through its agent at Portageville agreed with plaintiff to have cars there on a day named; that on that day plaintiff delivered at the defendant’s stock pen for shipment from Portageville to East St. Louis, fifty-five head of cattle, but that the defendant failed and neglected to supply the cars agreed on the date agreed and that plaintiff’s cattle were kept in the stock pen “more than --
It is urged by the defendant that on account of the condition of the track at the north end, it was unable to receive the shipment until it could transport it, claiming that it did this and so advised plaintiff, who acquiesced. Second, that plaintiff never delivered the stock for shipment until the day they were forwarded. Third, that the petition is indefinite as to what plaintiff seeks to recover upon. From the abstract furnished in the case by the appellant and the brief of its counsel, there being no opposing brief, we gather that the testimony was conflicting as to the fact concerning the first and second errors assigned. That being so, the conclusion of the trial court on the facts is binding upon us, there being substantial evidence to support it.
As to the third proposition that the petition is indefinite, it is to be noted that no objection or motion was made to it on that account, and no exceptions are called to our attention in the statement and brief filed by the appellant’s counsel to the admission of testimony. The only exceptions, saved, as shown by this statement,
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.