Court Opinion

ID: 8023090
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:27:56.688268+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:43.956360
License: Public Domain

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAT
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the railroad company in transporting 1,342 head of cattle from Riverside, Oregon, to Billings, in this state. The plaintiff recovered judgment in the sum of $1,870.80, and defendant appealed therefrom, and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.
The record discloses that on May 10, 1916, the defendant company furnished a cattle train of thirty-eight stock-cars for the shipment of these cattle; that the cattle were loaded dur*427ing the morning of that day, and the journey commenced soon after noon; that during the evening of the 11th the cattle were unloaded at Lima, Montana, for feed, water and rest, and were reloaded and the journey resumed about noon on the 12th; that at Lima one steer was found dead, three others were dead when the train reached Billings, and a fifth died immediately after the cattle were unloaded there.
It is the contention of the plaintiff that'at a point near Vail, Oregon, the train was negligently subjected to a violent jolt, which caused some of the cattle to be severely bruised and otherwise injured, with the result that the five died and the others were impaired in value, and that at Lima two head were negligently permitted to escape and be lost to plaintiff; that the railroad company negligently failed to provide adequate facilities for watering the cattle at Lima, and in consequence thereof about 250 head were not watered there or at all during the entire journey of approximately 1,000 miles, which resulted in unnecessary shrinkage, loss of flesh and depreciation in value.
The single assignment of error raises the question: Is the evidence sufficient to justify the verdict ? For present purposes we shall assume that the evidence is sufficient to justify a finding that the two head of cattle were lost at Lima through the negligence of the defendant, and that these two animals were of the reasonable value of $120; also that the evidence supports a finding that the five head which died were of the reasonable value of $295, and that they died as the result of the negligent handling of the train by the defendant; also that fifteen other cattle (out of a group of seventy referred to by the plaintiff) received such injuries as could have been inflicted only by the negligence of the carrier in handling its train near Vail, and that the damage to these cattle amounted to $20 per head, or $300. Without undertaking to make analysis of the evidence upon which the foregoing assumptions are based, we content ourselves with the statement that it may be fairly said to sustain a verdict for $715.
*428There is a sort of general claim made for damages in the stun of $1 per head for injuries to each of 1,265 head, but there is not any substantial evidence to support it, and it is reasonably certain from the verdict returned that it was disallowed altogether by the jury. Leaving out of further account the 1,287 head mentioned, the largest single item of damages is claimed on account of the depreciation in value of fifty-five head (the remainder of the seventy mentioned above), occasioned by the alleged rough handling of the train near Yail and the failure of the company to furnish adequate facilities for watering these cattle at Lima.
Counsel for the defendant company insist that these fifty-five cattle are not identified as of the 250 head which did not receive water at Lima or elsewhere on the journey, but we are inclined to accept the evidence as sufficient for the purpose. Touching the question of the adequacy of the facilities for watering the cattle at .Lima, the plaintiff’s own testimony discloses the following facts: The plaintiff and a caretaker in his employ were in charge of the cattle, and at Pocatello arranged to have the train stopped at Lima for feed, water and rest; that at Lima the stockyards consisted of five stock-pens into which the cattle were unloaded, the total number being divided as nearly equally as could be; that in each of four of these pens provision was made for watering the cattle, but the' fifth pen, containing about 250 cattle, had no facilities for watering; that the shipment was unloaded on the evening of May 11 and water furnished to the cattle in the four pens provided with proper facilities; that complaint was made by plaintiff to the agent of the road concerning the other pen, but nothing was done to correct the defect or provide for watering the cattle in that pen; that the same condition prevailed on the morning of the 12th and until the cattle were reloaded to continue the journey; that the cattle in the fifth pen were not watered at Lima or elsewhere on the entire trip from Riverside to Billings; that the cattle in each of the four *429pens with watering facilities were reloaded Before the cattle in the fifth pen.
Onr attention has not been directed to any rule of law or [1] reason which imposed upon the railroad company the duty to equip every one of the pens with watering facilities. It was required to make adequate provision for watering these cattle, but the burden of showing a breach of that duty was upon the plaintiff. (Grieve v. Illinois Cent. Ry. Co., 104 Iowa, 659, 74 N. W. 192.)
It was developed in the evidence for defendant, and it is perfectly apparent to anyone, that as soon as the reloading was commenced in the early morning of the 12th, and as each successive pen of the first four was made vacant, ample opportunity was afforded plaintiff to transfer the cattle from pen 5 to the vacant pen or pens, and provide them with an abundant supply of water, and his failure to take advantage of the opportunity can be attributed only to his gross neglect or willful misconduct. He was in charge of the shipment, and it was his business to see that his stock received proper care, if the facilities were available for the purpose. He could not stand upon the technical claim that the most convenient means conceivable were not provided, and rely upon his ability to recover damages from the company as compensation for the loss resulting from his own want of ordinary care.
If we accept the extreme view advanced by counsel for plaintiff that the company was negligent in failing to have the fifth pen properly equipped, the question then arises: Was that negligence the proximate cause of the 'damage to the cattle which were deprived of water? The proximate cause of an injury [2] is that which, in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any new, independent cause, produces the injury, and without which it would not have occurred. (Mize v. Rocky Mountain Bell Tel. Co., 38 Mont. 521, 129 Am. St. Rep. 659, 16 Ann. Cas. 1189, 100 Pac. 971.) The railroad company can be [3] held liable for its failure to provide water in the fifth pen only on condition that to its lapse of duty in that respect is *430directly attributable tbe injury to plaintiff’s cattle, as any given effect is to be assigned to its efficient cause. (Monson v. La France Copper Co., 39 Mont. 50, 133 Am. St. Rep. 549, 101 Pac. 243; Stones v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., ante, p. 342, 197 Pac. 252.)
From the review of the evidence above, it appears to us to be incontrovertible that the damage to these cattle at Lima resulted, not from the lack of water in the one pen, but from the failure of the plaintiff to avail himself of the facilities afforded in the other pens. In other words, the negligence of the company was at most the remote, and not the proximate, cause of the loss suffered, and it cannot be held responsible therefor. “Causa próxima non remota spectatur.”
Plaintiff testified that the value of each of these fifty-five animals was lessened to the extent of $20. His testimony upon this feature of the case follows: “It was the bruises on the cattle, and the lack of water on the way here shrunk these cattle more than they should have shrunk; they was badly shrunken; could not say how much more than they should have been; probably ten to fifteen pounds to the head. * * * I now undertake to say that the condition these cattle were in when they arrived [at Billings] was caused by the jolt and by the failure to get water at Lima. That was the sole cause of it. * * * I figured these cattle were so much worse shape than they should have been ordinarily, and this wás caused by the jolt and the scarcity of water at Lima.” No effort whatever was made to segregate the damages occasioned by the bruises. The jury were advised by the instructions [4] given that recovery could be had only for such damages as resulted proximately from defendant’s negligence. The burden was upon plaintiff to show with reasonable certainty and by a preponderance of the evidence the loss he had sustained and the amount thereof as definitely as possible. (Carman v. Montana Cent. Ry. Co., 32 Mont. 137, 79 Pac. 690.) Since the damages were shown in the aggregate, for an undefined portion of which defendant may be liable and for an unascertained *431balance of whieh it is not liable, the jury could not possibly determine tbe extent of its responsibility upon this branch of the case. To avoid the expense and delay necessarily incident to a new trial, the plaintiff should be permitted, if he so elects, to accept a judgment reduced to the amount whieh the evidence warrants.
The cause is remanded to the district court, with directions to grant a new trial unless within thirty days from the filing of the remittitur plaintiff consents in writing filed with the clerk of the lower court, to a reduction of the amount of the judgment to $715. If such consent is given, the judgment will be modified accordingly nunc pro tunc as of the date of the original judgment, and, as thus modified, will stand affirmed, and the order refusing a new trial will also be affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Brantly - and Associate Justices Cooper and Galen concur.