Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Carroll

81 S.W. 1020, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 359, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 237
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 11, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 81 S.W. 1020 (Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Carroll) 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.

Bluebook
Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Carroll, 81 S.W. 1020, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 359, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 237 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

About the 1st of April, 1901, C. A. Yantis made a verbal contract wtih the live stock agent of the *360 Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company for the transportation of a large number of cattle from Childress, Texas, to Rosalia, Kan., the cattle to be delivered to the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Company at Childress, Texas, to be carried by it to Bowie, Texas, there to be delivered to the Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Company, and to be carried by it and the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific company to Wichita, Kan., and thence over the Missouri Pacific Railway to Rosalia, Kan. It was agreed that Yantis was to put in his order for the cars to the Fort Worth & Denver company a reasonable time before he expected to ship, and that on receipt of this order the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific company would furnish cara for the shipment. It was also agreed, at the request of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific company, that the cattle should have their destination named in the billing made out by the Fort Worth & Denver company as Medford, Okla., a point on the line of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific company, near the south line of Kansas; and it was further agreed by the last named company that it would see that the cattle were carried thence to Rosalia without delay, but that this feature of the contract should be kept a secret by Yantis.

The cattle were shipped in pursuance of this contract the latter part of April, 1901, and on account of delays and rough handling many of them died and many more were injured, in consequence of which the appellee, as" the assignee of Yantis, recovered a judgment against the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific company for $2000, against the Chicago, Rock Island & Texas company for $1000, and against the' Fort Worth & Denver City company for $1000, and the last named company recovered a judgment fora $450 on its plea against the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific' company, from which judgment said companies have appealed.

The issue made by the pleadings, and the result of the trial, are more fully stated in the brief of the two Rock Island companies in their introductory “statement of the nature and result of suit,” to which, however, should be added as facts alleged by the plaintiff below the following: “That in transporting each of said trains of cattle the defendants side-tracked the same a- great deal and thereby made it necessary to frequently stop and start the train; that the switching incident to taking off and putting in cars and handling said cattle in connection with dead freight, all had a tendency to jerk the cattle- down and worry and injure them.. Plaintiff is unable to state the precise items of rough handling, as aforesaid, or the exact times and places that it occurred, because- he ,is not furnished' with nor does said Yantis- know definitely such facts, but plaintiff alleges that generally there was -rough handling of said cattle in the manner stated at Bowie, Texas, and all the way from there to their destination.”

The assignments of error are entirely too numerous to be taken up and discussed- as presented in the brief. We will endeavor, however, in *361 stating our conclusions, to cover all the points raised by the assignments.

The application for continuance was properly overruled, because the diligence shown was wholly insufficient, as appears from the statement appended by the judge to the bill of exceptions, which statement is found on pages 18 and 19 of said brief.

The testimony offered by appellee, and admitted over objection, as to the transportable condition of the cattle when they were offered for transportation, and as to the effect upon them and their value of delay and bad treatment received from the railway companies, and as to what constituted overloading, and as to what was a reasonable time to transfer them from one carrier to.another at Bowie, and other matters of opinion, was competent; the witnesses having shown themselves qualified to give opinions as experts on such matters, as will be seen from the bills of exception and the judge's explanation in connection therewith, and as will more fully appear from the statement of facts.

It was also competent to prove the condition, history and shortage of the cattle placed in? the pasture at Eosalia. This tended to show the extent of the injury and loss.

The testimony as to the freight charged, complained of in the third assignment, was perhaps subject to the objection that it was wholly immaterial, but we are not prepared to say that it was irrelevant, and being wholly immaterial, we are prepared to say that it could not reasonably have done any harm.

As to the testimony offered, and admitted over objection, tending to restrict the scope and effect of the written contracts of shipment executed en route, we need not determine whether the court erred in these rulings, since we are of opinion that the defense of the Bock Island companies, founded upon these written contracts, was not available. . While the written contracts executed en route limited the liability of the Bock Island companies to their own lines, they did not purport to cover shipments beyond Medford, but in terms only applied to shipments from Childress to Medford. These contracts were executed in this form in pursuance of a more comprehensive verbal agreement made at Kansas City with the live stock agent of said companies, or at least of the Chicago, Bock Island & Pacific, by the terms of which the cattle were to be carried from Medford to Eosalia and Summit, points on the Missouri Pacific, through the instrumentality of the Bock Island, and without any action on the part of the shipper beyond Medford, a station on the Bock Island road, which was treated in the written contracts as the point of destination. The fact that the real destination of the cattle was Eosalia, Kan., was kept a secret at the instance of said live stock agent, and he undertook, for the company or companies represented by him, to control that part of the shipment as something outside of the written contracts.

The evidence of Moffitt which seems from the twenty-sixth bill of *362 exceptions to have been excluded, seems from the agreed statement of facts to have been admitted.

We see no abuse of the court’s discretion in permitting plaintiff below to introduce in rebuttal the evidence complained of under the twenty-third, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth assignments, tending to prove the allegations of the petition quoted above, which allegations were broad enough, we think, to admit the proof. Hence both propositions under these assignments are overruled.

We find no merit in the assignments complaining of the charges given, and of the court’s action in refusing charges. As already seen, the written contracts did not purport to control the shipment beyond Medford, which disposes of the complaints of the charge in that respect.

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Related

Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Kapp
83 S.W. 233 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W. 1020, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 359, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-texas-railway-co-v-carroll-texapp-1904.