Belcher v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co.

50 S.W. 559, 92 Tex. 593, 1899 Tex. LEXIS 176
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1899
DocketNo. 768.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 559 (Belcher v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belcher v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co., 50 S.W. 559, 92 Tex. 593, 1899 Tex. LEXIS 176 (Tex. 1899).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellant in the District Court of Cooke County on the 23d day of February, 1893, to recover of appellee special damages to 1500 head of beef cattle, caused by the negligence of appellee in failing to transport from Sherman to Gainesville within a reasonable time a certain carload of cotton seed hulls, delivered to it on Saturday, December 24, 1892, consigned to appellant at Gainesville, by reason whereof his cattle were for three days deprived of the proper and accustomed food, and were thereby greatly injured and damaged. It was also alleged that, at and before • the time of delivery of said hulls to appellee at Sherman, it was informed and knew plaintiff’s purpose in ordering said hulls, and that he was out of feed for his cattle, and that the same would suffer great injury without said feed.

“The answer was a general denial, and specially, that the hulls were received on the 24th of December, 1892, and were forwarded without unreasonable delay; that the next day was Sunday and Christmas — a legal holiday — and that it did not run trains from Sherman on such days, and was not bound to do so; that appellant was guilty of contributory negligence in not laying in earlier a sufficient stock of hulls for his cattle to cover Sundays and holidays; that he might have avoided the damages complained of by buying other food .in Gainesville, where there was plenty; and that appellee had no notice of the necessitous condition of appellant at the time it received the hulls for shipment, and that the damages sued for were therefore not in contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made.

“The record discloses that the car of hulls was delivered to appellee at Sherman before 2 p. m. on Saturday, December 24, 1892, and at that time we conclude the local agent at Sherman, who received same and issued the bill of lading, had no notice of the necessitous condition of Belcher at Gainesville, although there is some evidence that he did then have such notice. However, at 2:05 of the same afternoon a message was sent by appellee’s local agent at Gainesville to its train-master at Denison, informing him of the facts and requesting that the car of hulls be forwarded from Sherman immediately. The message was in substance repeated by the trainmaster to the local agent at Sherman at 5:52 p. m. of the same afternoon. Appellee had a freight train which left Sherman that afternoon at 6 o’clock and arrived at *596 Denison at 7:05 p. m. of the same day. There was no freight train out of Sherman to Denison on Sunday over appellee’s line.

“The hulls were not started from Sherman until Monday, the 26th, at 6 p. m., and consequently arrived at Gainesville on Tuesday about noon. The cattle lost considerable flesh by reason of having no hulls to feed with the meal. The evidence tends to prove that the meal is not fit to feed without the hulls, and also that where cattle have been fed for sixty days, as in this case, on cotton meal and hulls, neither straw, hay, nor corn will suffice to take the place of the hulls, and that any change in the food cause's the cattle not to eat it and seriously affects them in weight and otherwise.”

The Court of Civil Appeals made no findings of fact except as copied above. Dp on trial before a jury, a verdict was rendered for the defendant and judgment entered thereon in the District Court, which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

The second ground of error stated in the application is that the District Court erred in refusing to give the following instruction, requested by the plaintiff: “Plaintiff requests the court to supplement its charge as to the duty of defendant to run a train on Sunday by giving the following: ‘But if you find that the defendant was guilty of negligence in not getting the car of hulls out of Sherman on December 24, 1892, on which day it ran a train from Sherman to Denison, and if you further find that, but for this negligence, the delay in the transportation would not have occurred, then you should find for plaintiff, if you find the other issues submitted to you in his favor. If you find that the defendant ran a train from Denison to Gainesville on December 25, 1892, and that it was guilty of negligence in holding that car in Sherman on December 24, 1892, and that but for this negligence the car of hulls would have been transported to Denison in time to have been brought to Gainesville in the train which it ran from Denison to Gaines-ville, December 25, 1892, then upon this issue, you should find for the plaintiff.’ ”

The court gave the following charge: “The defendant is deemed by the law to have received said car of hulls from the time that its agent at Sherman issued and signed the bill of lading therefor, and it is for you to determine whether or not, from all the evidence before you, it was guilty of negligence in failing to transport said car to Gainesville within a reasonable time. But the defendant was under no obligations to run its train on Sunday, and can not be charged with negligence in failing to transport said car of hulls from Sherman on Sunday if it run no freight train over that line that day.” The first part of the charge given defined in general terms the duty of the railroad company in shipping the carload of hulls, but qualified it by stating to the jury that the company was not bound to run its train between Sherman and Denison on Sunday. We think that the jury, in reading this charge, might have been led to believe that under the circumstances of the case the railroad company was not required to carry the carload of hulls to Deni *597 son until Monday, and it was the right of the plaintiff in the case to have the court instruct the jury upon the very facts proved and to direct their minds to the very circumstances which were relied upon to establish the rights of the plaintiff in the case. The charge which was requested did no more than this, and should have been given by the court.

The court also instructed the jury as follows: “It was the duty of the plaintiff, and the law required it of him, to exercise ordinary care to prevent his cattle from suffering injury for want of feed, notwithstanding the defendant may have been guilty of negligence in transporting said cotton seed hulls, and if you find that plaintiff, by the exercise of such ordinary care as a reasonably prudent man would have exercised under similar circumstances, could have procured other feed for his cattle after he saw that said cotton seed hulls had not arrived, and if by his failure to procure such other feed he contributed to the injury of his cattle, you will find for the defendant.”

The charge informed the jury, in effect, that if the plaintiff failed to use ordinary care to prevent the injury which might arise from the defendant’s negligence, he could not récover from the railroad company for any damages sustained by him through its negligence. This charge applied strictly the rule of contributory negligence to acts which occurred after the injury had been inflicted, whereas the rule stated is applicable only to those acts which concur in producing the injury. Smithwick v. Upson, 59 Conn., 271.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 559, 92 Tex. 593, 1899 Tex. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belcher-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railway-co-tex-1899.