Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Daggett

28 S.W. 525, 87 Tex. 322, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 466
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1894
DocketNo. 220.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 525 (Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Daggett) 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
Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co. v. Daggett, 28 S.W. 525, 87 Tex. 322, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 466 (Tex. 1894).

Opinion

DENMAN, Associate Justice.

Plaintiff, J. P. Daggett, sued the Wichita Valley Bailway Company and the Fort Worth & Denver City Bailway Company, on their common law liability as common carriers, to recover damages resulting to plaintiff on a shipment of 259 head of beeves, from Dundee, Archer County, Texas, "to Chicago, Ill., by reason (1) of delay in shipment, the market being alleged to have declined during the delay;" (2) of mixing the cattle, which had been classified for market; and (3) of failure to feed and water the cattle during transit.

Defendants pleaded that the cattle were shipped under a special contract whereby plaintiff (1) released the carriers from any damage resulting from delay, and (2) agreed at his own risk to feed and water, load and unload, the cattle wherever they should be unloaded and reloaded for any purpose, during transit.

Defendants also pleaded, among other things, that the injuries to the cattle resulted from • the negligence of plaintiff and his employes in deserting the cattle and refusing to give them proper attention.

The case was tried before the court without a jury.

*326 C. B. Daggett testified for plaintiff, that as an employe of plaintiff he graded, and loaded accordingly, said cattle on the Wichita Valley Railway, between 8 and 9 o’clock p. m., July 23,1891; and thereupon, in company with “another hand,” boarded the train to go with said cattle to Chicago for the purpose of taking care of them during transit. That when he reached Wichita Falls, about 10 o’clock that night, he learned of a wreck ahead on the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway, and that the cattle would be detained sometime thereby; and thereupon he and the “other hand” left the cattle and did not see them any more until next morning, when he learned that they had been mixed in the pen in unloading them during the night. That he did not feed or water, nor suggest that the cattle needed feed or water, while they were at Wichita Falls, although he said they could have been watered there by driving to a tank near the pen or to the river. That the agent of the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Company on that day at Wichita Falls requested him to assist in regrading and loading the cattle, which he refused to do, for the reason that it could not be done in the stock pens, and he did not know all the brands. That about 6 o’clock in the evening of July 24th, the cattle having been loaded, started on the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway to Fort Worth, and that he and the “ other hand” went with the cattle, arriving at Fort Worth about 2 o’clock next morning, where they remained about two or three hours, and left about 6 or 7 o’clock on the Texas & Pacific Railway for Texarkana, a distance of about 253 miles, at which place they arrived on the evening of the next day, July 25th, where the cattle were fed and watered for the first time since they were shipped at Dundee on the evening of July 23rd.

This witness further testified, “that he owned an interest in said cattle,’’ but did not state the extent of such interest, and “that he went from Wichita Falls to Chicago as agent of defendant, at the request of the defendant.” That while at Wichita Falls, and at two or three places between Wichita Falls and Fort Worth, the cattle could have been watered on the cars, but he did not water them nor ask that it be done, because he did not think they needed it, and thought they would do very well without food or water until they reached Texarkana. That at Fort Worth there were ample facilities for feeding and watering the stock, both-in the stockyards of the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Company and in those of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, but that he neither watered and fed the stock there nor requested that it be-done, because he thought it was not necessary, and that they would make it all right to Texarkana, where he expected to feed and water them; but that when he arrived in Texarkana and found the cattle much damaged and some of them dead for want of feed and water, he “found that he was-mistaken in thinking that they could make it to Texarkana all right without feed or water.” So one *327 does or could deny that the cattle were greatly damaged by the cruel treatment detailed above.

The court below rendered judgment for plaintiff for such a sum as to show conclusively that it included all damage done to the cattle between Dundee and Texarkana.

The Court of Civil Appeals, Head, J., dissenting, affirmed the judgment upon the ground (1) that the delay at Wichita Falls was occasioned by the negligence of the Fort Worth & Denver City Bailway, defendant, in permitting a collision between one of its trains and a bull; (2) that such negligent delay, in law, conferred upon C. B. Daggett, agent of plaintiff, the right to rescind the special contract under which the cattle were shipped; (3) that C. B. Daggett did, at Wichita Falls, rescind said contract, and that thereby plaintiff was relieved of the duty imposed upon him by the contract of feeding and watering the cattle; (4) that upon the rescission of the contract the common law duty of feeding and watering the cattle devolved upon defendant; (5) that C. B. Daggett proceeded with the cattle from Wichita Falls as the agent of defendants, and not of plaintiff; and that therefore his negligence in failing to feed and water was the negligence of defendants. This is an analysis of the opinion as we understand it.

The record shows that this was an interstate shipment, and that by the terms of the shipment it was understood between plaintiff and defendants that plaintiff would send some one with the cattle to attend to feeding and watering, loading and unloading, during the trip; and to such shipment we will confine our remarks. The assignments of error are sufficient to question the correctness of each of the grounds above stated as the basis of the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, and we will discuss them in this order.

We can not say as a matter of law that there was no evidence to support the finding that the delay at Wichita Falls was negligence on part of the Fort Worth & Denver City Railway. The very fact of stopping and unloading after the cattle had only been on the train about two hours was some evidence of negligence; the long delay was evidence of negligence, and so was the fact that the company’s agents allowed the train to collide with a bull. This court does not pass upon the sufficiency of evidence.

Assuming that defendants were guilty of negligence in unloading or delaying at Wichita Falls, does it follow that plaintiff had the right, by reason thereof, to rescind the special contract of shipment without reference to the quantum of injury inflicted upon the cattle by such negligence? The general rule is; that where one is injured' by the negligence of another, the person injured must use all reasonable means at his command to avert or lessen the damage which would otherwise result from such negligence, and his failure to do so will limit his recovery to such damages as would' have resulted from such *328 negligence had such means been used, plus such a sum as would reasonably have been expended in the use of such means.

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28 S.W. 525, 87 Tex. 322, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-denver-city-railway-co-v-daggett-tex-1894.