Hoskins v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co.

Decision Date09 November 1885
Citation19 Mo.App. 315
PartiesCHARLES HOSKINS, Respondent, v. THE MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, Appellant.
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals

APPEAL from Henry Circuit Court, HON. JAMES B. GANTT, Judge.

Reversed and remanded.

The material facts are set forth in the opinion of the court.

ADAMS & BOWLES, for the appellant.

I. The court erred in admitting the account of sales from his commission men, of the cattle shipped. It was no legal proof of the value of the stock at St. Louis, or of their weight. The court erred, also, in admitting the report of Campbell, Lancaster & Co., as to sales of the stock. It is not a general market report, but only a private communication or circular letter, from one commission house. R. R. Co. v. Johnson, 42 Ala. 242; 1 Greenl. Evid., sect. 124; Fougue v. Burgess, 71 Mo. 389; Woods v. Hicks, 36 Mo. 326; Chouteau v. Searcy, 8 Mo. 375; Cable v. McDaniel, 33 Mo. 363; Langdorf v. Field, 36 Mo. 440.

II. The court erred in rejecting the contract of shipment offered in evidence by defendant. It was the contract of the parties, and it is immaterial, no fraud being shown, that the plaintiff did not read or understand it. Ry. Co. v. Cleary, 77 Mo. 634, and cases cited.

M. A. FYKE, for the respondent.

I. This action was brought to recover damages occasioned by reason of the failure of defendant to provide cars for the shipment of plaintiff's stock at the time defendant agreed to furnish said cars.
II. The case is exactly like the case of Harrison v. The Mo. Pac. Ry. Co. (74 Mo. 364), upon which case plaintiff relies for an affirmance of the judgment.

III. The market reports read in evidence were properly admitted, Thursteen v. Champayne, 3 Wallace (U. S.) 149; 1 Greenl. Evid., sect. 126.

HALL, J.

This is an action begun before a justice of the peace, upon a verbal contract, for the failure of defendant to deliver cars for the transportation of stock on the day agreed upon in the contract. The statement in this case is, in all essential respects, the same as the petition in the case of Harrison v. The Mo. Pacific Railway Co. (74 Mo. 364).

Judgment by default was rendered against the defendant. The defendant appealed to the circuit court.

During the trial the plaintiff in testifying said, among other things: “My commission men gave an account of sales, which shows the weights of my stock.” Against the defendant's objections the court permitted the plaintiff to introduce in evidence the said account of sales, which is as follows:

“Sales by CAMPBELL, LANCASTER & CO.

Sold for account of C. N. Hoskins:

Date.
Cattle.
Hogs.
Weight.
Dock.
Price.
Amount.
January 26,
39
..
47,580
..
$4 90
$2,331 42
January 26,
..
25
4,930
20
6 20
304 42
January 26,
..
35
10,210
80
6 30
638 19
Total...............................................

$3,274.03

CHARGES.

Freight and back charges
$144 00
Yardage
13 30
Hay
6 00
Corn
2 00
Commission
24 50
Net proceeds
3,084 23

$3,274 03.”

For plaintiff Z. B. Moore testified: “I am agent at Clinton, Missouri, for the firm of Campbell, Lancaster & Company, live stock commission merchants at East St. Louis, and they forward me reports of the market each day. They forwarded me the following report of the market for January 26, 1883:”

Which report the court, against defendant's objection, permitted the plaintiff to introduce in evidence. Sufficient of the report is here copied to indicate its character:

“CAMPBELL, LANCASTER & CO.,

LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

NATIONAL STOCK YARDS, ILL,
)
Friday, Jan. 26, 1883, 3 p. m.

)

Receipts past 24 hours, 1,250 cattle; 3,150 hogs; 1,520 sheep.

Cattle, heavy shipping steers are slow and from 10c. to 15c. lower than yesterday. Medium weight steers are about 10c. lower and slower, but light shipping steers are fairly active, and only a shade lower. Coarse, uneven cattle are irregular and dull. Butchers' cattle ruled fairly active and steady. There is a good inquiry for fresh milch cows.

FOLLOWING ARE REPRESENTIVE SALES TO-DAY:

13 Mixed Butchers
873, $4 00
17 Native Steers
1365, $4 45
16 Native Butchers
944, 4 25
15 Native Steers
1028, 4 60
12 Native Cows
838, 3 75
14 Native Bulls
1403, 3 65
10 Southwest Steers
940, 4 00
14 Native Steers
1192, 4 80
37 Native Butchers
1043, 4 35
13 Native Steers
1432, 5 30
18 Native Steers
1131, 4 80
24 Native Steers
1377, 5 50
17 Native Steers
994, 4 60
17 Native Steers
1277, 5 10
17 Native Steers
1238, 4 70
29 Native Steers
1152, 4 55
14 Native Cows
972, 3 37
34 Native Steers
1360, 5 50
27 Native Steers
1276, 5 05
21 Native Steers
1049, 4 75
32 Native Steers
1179, 4 96
57 Native Steers
1008, 4 75
39 Native Steers
1220, 4 90
19 Native Steers

1171, 4 70

The defendant offered in evidence the written contract for the shipment of the stock, afterwards made by it with the plaintiff; upon objection by plaintiff the court refused to permit defendant to introduce the contract in evidence.

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff the defendant has appealed to this court. In this court defendant complains of the rulings made by the court below, as to the admissibility of the testimony mentioned.

I.

We are unable to see any ground on which it can be maintained that the ““account of sales,” sent to plaintiff by his commission men is admissible testimony. It was clearly hearsay testimony and inadmissible. The fact that the “account” was in writing did not change its character. Had it been made verbally to the plaintiff it would have been hearsay; and the plaintiff could not have repeated it to the jury. O'Neil v. Crain, 67 Mo. 251; Fogue v. Burgess, 71 Mo. 389; Cable v. McDaniel, 33 Mo. 363; Wood v. Hicks, 36 Mo. 327; Langsdorf et al. v. Field et al., 36 Mo. 441. Had the facts, stated in the “account,” been stated in the form of a receipt given to plaintiff by his commission men, the receipt would have been hearsay and inadmissible. State v. Sutton, 64 Mo. 111. There is nothing in the record to show the account admissible as a memorandum or original entry.

II.

The report sent by Campbell, Lancaster & Company to their agent, Moore, was also inadmissible.

In Gibson et al. v. Ebert et al. (52 Mo. 264), from the statement of the case it appears that “the plaintiffs also introduced the deposition of one Chism, by which the price of bagging was proved in July, 1870, and with which deposition there was an exhibit filed, proved by said deposition to be a price-current issued at New Orleans at said time. This price-current was rejected as evidence by the court, as being irrelevant, and incompetent, and the plaintiff excepted.” In treating of this question, Judge Vories, who delivered the opinion of the court, on page 270, says: “The price-current at New Orleans, offered in evidence by the plaintiffs, was, also, properly excluded by the court. There, at least, should have been satisfactory evidence that it contained a correct statement of the prices by all who knew the fact in order to admit it in evidence. The price-current was only secondary and not the best evidence of the material fact to be proved, which was the actual price or value of bagging on the fifteenth day of July, 1870 * * *.” This case being in point, we are bound by it.

III.

This case, not only as to the petition or statement, but as to the facts, is substantially the same as the case of Harrison v. R. R. Co., supra. For the reasons given in the opinion in that case the trial court in this case properly refused to permit the defendant to read the contract in evidence.

The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.

All concur.

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