Davis v. Cochran

275 S.W. 423, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 745
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 1925
DocketNo. 7370.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 423 (Davis v. Cochran) 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
Davis v. Cochran, 275 S.W. 423, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 745 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

*425 COBBS, J.

Appellee filed this suit in the Sixty-Seventh district court of Tarrant county against appellant, to recover $2,000 damages. on account of delay and improper handling accorded a shipment of hogs moving from Fort Worth, Tex., to ’Wichita, Kan., about January 25, 1919. Appellee alleged that, on account of unreasonable delay and improper handling of said shipment 43 of the hogs died,-to his damage in the sum of $480.89, and that there was an excess shrinkage on said 43 head which died of 2,552 pounds, to his damage in the sum of $357.28, and that- the difference in the market value of the remaining hogs at the time they were sold, and what their market value would have been if they had been safely transported within a reasonable length of time, was $1S3.73. Appellee also sued for excess feed charges en route, in the sum of $18, and excess feed charges after arriving at destination, in the sum of $112.50, and veterinary charges incurred at destination on account of the condition of the hogs, in the sum of $447.-59. He alleged he was entitled to recover the difference between' the reasonable market price of the hogs at the time of sale and their reasonable market value had they been safely transported with dispatch, together with other charges and expenses necessarily incurred in the proper treatment and care of said hogs. It is alleged that, if the shipment had been safely transported with reasonable dispatch, the hogs would have been of the reasonable market value of $4,020 at their destination, and that, if said hogs had any actual value at the time of their arrival at destination, same did not exceed the sum of $2,500.

- Appellant answered, pleading that, if any of the hogs died after arrival at Wichita, or there was any depreciation of the value of such hogs, same was caused by such animals being afflicted with some contagious or infectious disease, and that the hogs in question were held in the stockyards and hog pens at North Fort Worth, Tex.; before shipment, and were there exposed to infectious and contagious diseases peculiar to such animals, and that such disease fvas contracted by the hogs before they were loaded on the railroad cars at North Fort Worth; and further that, if such disease was contracted by the animals as a result of being exposed to, same while in transit, the exposure of such hogs to such disease was not the result of any negligence or want of care on the part of appellant, but was the result of the negligence and want of care on the part of appellee in not making a request that the hogs in question be loaded into clean and disinfected railroad cars; appellant alleging in this connection that such shipment was billed by the appellee as being hogs for immediate slaughter, and that under such designation, under the rules and regulations in force and effect at the time, issued and promulgated by the Secretary of Agriculture of the United States, there was no obligation on the part of appellant to load the hogs in dean and disinfected cars, and that appellee well understood that, when the hogs were so billed, the shipment would not be loaded into clean and disinfected ears, unless a special request was made therefor, and that an extra charge would have been made for such loading; appellant further alleging that in so billing said hogs, with knowledge that same would be loaded into cars which had not been cleaned and disinfected, the plaintiff assumed the risk of such hogs becoming afflicted with such contagious and infectious disease while in transit.

In a first supplemental petition appellee 'alleged that, if the loss and damage was due to any of the matters set up in appellant’s answer, such loss and damage was increased, aggravated, and proximately contributed to “by the unusual, unreasonable, and negligent delay of the defendants and their agents, servants, and employees, and the connecting carriers of said shipment, and the negligence on the part of the defendants, their agents, servants, employees, and connecting carriers of said hogs in otherwise transporting said animals.”

The case was submitted to the jury on special issues, and on the answers of the jury to the special issues submitted the court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $1,693.-52. Thq issues involved in this case are not complex, but simple. The cause was correctly submitted to the jury, upon 26 issues that covered every possible phase of the ease, together with all necessary explanations of the law covering the same. Every issue was found by the jury in favor of appellee, and thereupon the court entered judgment. This judgment will have to be affirmed, unless.it is made to appear by proper assignment that some error of law was committed by the trial court.

The first contention of appellant is that the undisputed testimony shows that at the time the hogs reached destination they were found to be afflicted with a disease known as swine plague, and the undisputed testimony shows, by an expert veterinarian who made the diagnosis, that the hogs had been so infected before being loaded on cars at Fort Worth, so the appellee, therefore, was not entitled to recover damages resulting from such diseased condition of his hogs.

This is the first of 15 propositions upon which appellant predicates his appeal, all in effect presenting the same question in a conglomerated mass to be picked out separately, which we will try to do by a general discussion touching upon each- Dr. Ross Moorman is the veterinarian who testified as an expert. He examined 308 live animals on January 29, 1919, and the same number on February 3, 1919, and he testified that he found the *426 hogs diseased with swine plague. He goes into minute detail, giving a technical description of the disease, and stated .that in his opinion such disease could not have resulted from any delay sustained during the shipment, or from any rough handling accorded to such shipment while in transit. It will be borne in mind that he never saw these hogs until they reached their destination. In his opinion their primary trouble was swine plague infection, which was .undoubtedly acquired in passing through the Fort Worth stockyards without any prophylaxis, and that the disease could not have had its beginning or incipiency in transit and reached the state of development that he found after the time they were shipped from Fort Worth and the time he examined the hogs.

Appellant predicates the error upon the testimony of the expert witness Ross Mooi*-man, the veterinarian, who inspected and examined the hogs at the point of destination. He stated that about 50 per cent, of the hogs appeared normal. S. P. Buckingham testified that he, had had 14 years’ experience in dealing with hogs, and was the salesman who handled the hogs at Wichita, Kan., and that the “hogs were more or less infected, and had the entire shipment driven back to the stockyards holding pens, where infected hogs are held for inspection and treatment; that he was'having a good many orders, and went to the pens, and the first pen contained 31 head of stock pigs, sick with the thumps, and knew he could not sell them, and, looking through the other pens, .he could see that they were in the same condition; that 43 hogs died subsequent to their arrival at Wichita, Kan.

There were only two expert veterinary surgeons who testified, to wit, Dr. Ross Moorman, who only saw the hogs at destination, never before, and treated them. Theoretically and by one.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 423, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-cochran-texapp-1925.