Fentiman v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

98 S.W. 939, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 455, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 538
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 98 S.W. 939 (Fentiman v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway 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.

Bluebook
Fentiman v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 98 S.W. 939, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 455, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 538 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

2LEILL, Associate Justice.

The appellant sued the appellee as a common carrier, to recover $1,255.01 damages for loss óf his goods received by the company in Chicago, Illinois, to be transported thence and delivered to plaintiff in San Antonio, Texas.

The defendant answered by a general denial and pleaded specially that it received the goods on or about May 25, 1903, at Chicago for transportation to plaintiff at San Antonio; that in course of transportation the car in which the goods were loaded reached Kansas City, Missouri, and while upon the tracks of defendant in its yards at said city, the car was flooded with -water by reason of an unexpected and extraordinary or unprecedented flood from the rivers and creeks near Kansas *457 City, and remained under water several days until the flood receded, and that the damage to the goods was 'caused by the flood; and that- the damage complained of resulted from and was caused by the unexpected and extraordinary flood; and was the result of an act of God, for which defendant was not liable.

By a supplemental petition the plaintiff pleaded, that if the goods were destroyed by the flood as pleaded by defendant, it was through its negligence in exposing and permitting the goods to be exposed in the car to the danger of the flood; for that defendant had due notice and warning of the probable occurrence of the flood, by common rumor, observation and reports of the United States Weather Bureau at said time and place, whereby it was put upon notice of such danger, and it, therefore, became its duty to protect plaintiff’s goods therefrom. That despite such notice and warning, which were publicly issued on the 26th, 27th, 28th and 30th days of May and June 1, 1903, and although its yards were threatened with such flood, defendant after receiving the goods at Chicago about May 26, 1903, and forwarding them to Kansas City where they arrived May 29, in apparent good order, at a time when said flood was imminent and it was generally known that the danger-point to the tracks in the yards of defendant had been reached by the flood, the defendant in disregard of its duty to plaintiff as a common carrier, permitted and caused the car containing the goods to be placed on grounds threatened by such flood and to remain there, although aware of the threatened flood, and negligently failed to remove the same from such place of danger. That the river bottom where the car containing the goods was placed had been inundated to the same or greater extent, which was common history and tradition, and the defendant, by the exercise of due diligence could have reasonably anticipated the flood and consequent damage to plaintiff’s goods, and have provided against the same.

After hearing the evidence, the court, upon the request of defendant’s counsel, peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant, which was accordingly done. From the judgment entered upon such verdict this appeal is prosecuted.

As the assignment of error complains of the peremptory instruction of the court, it becomes necessary for us to review tire evidence upon the issues made by the pleadings, and determine whether, under the law pertinent to it, no other findings of fact can reasonably be deduced by ordinary minds than such as would clearly exonerate the defendant from liability for the destruction of the value of plaintiff’s property.

It is not contended by defendant that plaintiff was not the owner of the property in question; and it reasonably appears from the evidence that it was of the value alleged, and that its value was wholly destroyed while in defendant’s possession as a common carrier. The defendant received the goods from the Goodrich Transportation Company, a connecting carrier, at Chicago on May 26, 1903, in apparently good order, to be transported over its line of railway and that of the International & Great Northern Bailway Company, a connecting carrier, to San Antonio, Texas, and there delivered to the plaintiff as consignee of the shipment. The car containing the goods, was, while on defendant’s line of road, and in its yards at Kansas Cffy, submerged by the flood hereinafter *458 described. The car containing the goods arrived at Kansas City May 29, 1903, and was forwarded thencé to Florence, Kansas, July 7, 1903. The distance from Kansas City, Missouri, is 458 miles.

There are two rivers near Kansas City, Missouri, the Missouri and the Kansas or Kaw. The former comes in from the north side of the city and runs in a southerly direction, The other comes in from the west and flows in an easterly direction until reaching a point within 2,000 feet of the Kansas-Missouri State line, then flows in a northerly direction, until it empties into the Missouri River. There is also Turkey Creek near the city. It flows in a northwesterly direction and empties into the Kansas or Kaw near the stock yards. The yards and depots of appellee are near this river and several blocks south of the Missouri.

The yards and depots of appellee at Kansas City are about thirteen feet above the normal or ordinary water line of the Kansas or Kaw River and of Turkey Creek. Several days prior to May 30, 1903, the water of these streams rose gradually, until the morning of May 31, 1903, when the streams overflowed their banks and commenced to submerge the adjacent railroad yards and wholesale district of the city, and from the morning of the 30th of May to the morning of the 31st, the water rose about five feet, and during the day of the 31st four feet more, and on the night of the 31st of May and the 1st of June five- feet additional, which submerged the business portions of the city from five to thirteen feet. The flood was from twenty-five to thirty feet above the normal flow of the water. With the exception of 1844, when the flood was as high if not higher than the one described, tire highest record of an overflow up to 1.903 was in 1881, when twenty-three feet of water above the city datum was reached, the flood of 1903 being thirteen feet and five inches above the record of 1881. The elevation of the Santa Fe railroad yards is about thirty feet above the city datum, and had never been overflowed prior to 1893, when the flood forced the water about seven feet above the tracks of the railroad and about eleven feet above the sidewalks of the streets in that part of the city. Appellee’s road was submerged six or eight days.

The Weather Bureau at Kansas City, Missouri, made predictions and issued warnings in advance of the flood of 1903, but those predictions were not specific as to the probable height the flood would reach, the bureau not having river gouges of the Kansas River and its tributaries.

The following warnings and predictions were issued by the weather bureau, viz: “May 26, 1903. Owing to the frequent rains in the Kaw and middle Missouri valleys the rivers will continue to rise at Kansas City. Should the rains keep up a few days longer the danger line will be reached.”

“May 27, 1903. The rivers will continue rising at Kansas City.”

“May 28, 1903. The great volume of water resulting from recent storms between Kansas City and Sioux City, and in the Kaw Valley, has raised the Missouri beyond danger line at Kansas City, the reading at 7 a. m. being 21.7 feet.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W. 939, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 455, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fentiman-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-texapp-1906.