Billberry v. Fort Worth & R. G. Ry. Co.
This text of 236 S.W. 106 (Billberry v. Fort Worth & R. G. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This suit was brought by appellant to recover damages to two shipments of cattle from Brownwood to Fort Worth, alleged to have been occasioned by rough handling in shipment, and by delay in delivery of the cattle to the stockyards at Fort Worth, by reason of which delay they could not be put upon the market until the day after their arrival. These shipments originated at Tuscola, on the line of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway Company, and were hauled by that company to Brownwood, being delivered at Brownwood in the usual time and in good order. At Brownwood the cattle were reshipped over the Fort Worth & Rio Grande to Fort Worth, under a. contract with the latter named road for such shipment.
The first issue for our decision, in the logical order, relates to the jurisdiction of this court. Appellee, by cross-assignment, alleges that the county court of McCulloch county had no jurisdiction to try the cause, for the reason that when the same was called in that court it was dismissed for want of prosecution, and that its subsequent reinstatement was without authority.
The court erred both in not sustaining the special exception above referred to and in permitting such testimony. When the plaintiff in a cause alleges that the carrier failed to deliver the shipment in the usual and ordinary time, if the carrier seeks to excuse the same, and to show that under the circumstances the shipment was delivered in a reasonable time, it must allege the circumstances which excuses the delay, and that notice of the same was given to the shipper before the shipment was made. The appellant in this case having proven that the shipment was not delivered in the usual and ordinary time, he had made a prima facie case of negligence, and the'evidence seeking *108 to excuse such delay should not have been admitted, in the absence of pleading justifying the same. Ry. v. Boyce, 171 S. W. 1096; Ry. Co. v. Stark, 103 Tex. 542, 131 S. W. 410; Ry. v. Word, 159 S. W. 375; Ry. v. McAulay, 26 S. W. 475.
The remaining issues in this cause have been decided by this court in Ry. Co. v. Hasse, 226 S. W. 448, and Ry. Co. v. Edens, 226 S. W. 451, not yet [officially] reported.
Por the errors committed by the trial court in not sustaining appellant’s exception hereinabove referred to, and in admitting testimony as to the crowded condition of the stockyards at Port Worth, this cause is reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
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236 S.W. 106, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billberry-v-fort-worth-r-g-ry-co-texapp-1921.