Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Wood-Hagenbarth Cattle Co.

146 S.W. 538, 105 Tex. 178, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 133
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1912
DocketNo. 2205.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 538 (Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Wood-Hagenbarth Cattle Co.) 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
Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Wood-Hagenbarth Cattle Co., 146 S.W. 538, 105 Tex. 178, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 133 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the court.

Wood-Hagenbarth Cattle Company, the defendant in error and the plaintiff below, in June, 1906, made four several shipments of cattle, consisting in all of eighty-six ears, from Valentine, Texas, to Columbus, New Mexico. The carriage from Valentine to El Paso was over the line of the plaintiff in error, and from El Paso to Columbus over that of the El Paso Southwestern Railway. Each of the several shipments moved from Valentine to El Paso on" a bill of lading issued by the plaintiff in error, by the terms of which it contracted to transport the cattle only to El Paso, the shipment being consigned in each bill to the defendant in error at El Paso, or to be there delivered to the connecting carrier of the plaintiff in error. Each shipment was re-billed at El Paso for transportation from that point to Columbus, New Mexico, over the line of the El Paso Southwestern Railway, the connecting carrier.

The freight charges demanded and collected by the plaintiff in error for the transportation of the cattle from Valentine to El Paso, which charges were paid by the defendant in error under protest, were proper and lawful if the shipments were inter-state in character, *181 but amounted to an overcharge of $12.75 per car according to the tariffs of the Texas Railroad Commission if they were intra-state. Contending that the movement of the cattle 'from Valentine to El Paso was purely an intra-state shipment, the defendant in error brought this suit against the plaintiff in error to recover the alleged freight overcharge, aggregating $1,096.50, and the further sum of $2,000.00 as statutory penalties under Articles 4573 and 4575. Upon a trial without jury the trial court found both as a matter of fact and of law that the shipments were inter-state, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff in error. The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals has reversed that judgment and in its opinion holds the shipments from Valentine to.El Paso to have been intra-state, having rendered judgment against the plaintiff in error for the alleged freight overcharge of $1,096.50, with interest, and aggregate penalties of $500.00. The question presented for our determination is whether the shipments were inter-state or intra-state.

In its findings of fact the trial court found that T. S. Kingsbury was the authorized agent and representative of the defendant in error and empowered to contract for it in respect to these shipments; that some time prior to June, 1906, he purchased for it certain cattle at Valentine, Texas, to be shipped from Valentine to Columbus, New Mexico; and from there to be driven across the border into Mexico to the ranch of the defendant in error. That with such shipment in view, after the purchase of the cattle, Kingsbury went to El Paso and there personally arranged with the agents of the two railway-companies named for their shipment from Valentine to Columbus, it being agreed by the companies between themselves and with Kings-bury that they would furnish twenty-five ears for the shipment of the cattle, and as they were able to furnish only twenty-five cars at that time the entire shipment would have to be made in such manner as to enable them to move each consignment from Valentine to Columbus, to be there unloaded and return the same cars to Valentine to be there reloaded, and so on until the entire shipment was completed. That it was the intention of Kingsbury when he bought the cattle and when he shipped them, to ship them from Valentine, Texas, direct to Columbus, New Mexico. That each consignment of the cattle was transported direct from Valentine to Columbus in a continuous, uninterrupted journey, and in the same cars in which they were loaded at Valentine, without being unloaded at any intermediate point. That E. H. Anthony, another agent and representative of the defendant in error, under Kingsbury’s directions accompanied each of the consignments from Valentine to Columbus, and acting on Kings-bury’s instructions directed the conductor in charge of each of the trains of plaintiff in error to deliver the cars at El Paso to the connecting carrier, El Paso Southwestern Bailway, for transportation over its line to Columbus.

Kingsbury testified as follows: “I suppose Anthony obeyed my instructions, and told the conductor of the G. H. & S. A. to turn the cars right over to the El Paso & Southwestern; * * * when I shipped them I had no intention of their stopping in El Paso longer than to transfer them to the other road, # * and when at *182 Columbus to be received by the agent, and driven from there on to the ranch in Mexico.”

Anthony, as a witness for the defendant in error, testified as follows: “I went with the cattle to Columbus; * * * I was on the train all the time from Valentine to El Paso; the same ears went right on through to Columbus. * * * The same cars were returned to Valentine for the next shipment. I would stay in Columbus just long enough to take the train back to El Paso. * * * It was the understanding between Mr. Kingsbury and myself that when I left Valentine with the train I was to take it right on through to Columbus, New Mexico.”

As to whether the movement of the cattle, from Valentine to El Paso was an inter-state or intra-state shipment must be determined by the following questions: What was the ultimate destination of the shipment at the .time it was made ? Though the ultimate destination may have been without the State, was there any break or interruption in the journey by any delivery of the cattle by the carrier to the consignee at El Paso ?

- If at the time the shipment originated its final destination was without the State, and it moved to such destination in a continuous and uninterrupted journey, unaccompanied by any delivery by the carrier to the the consignee within the State, it was clearly an interstate shipment under-the well established rules of this court upon this subject. On the other hand, if there was a delivery of the cattle by the carrier to the consignee within the State, it was an intra-state shipment, notwithstanding it may have been the intention of the shipper at the time the shipment was made that it should be transported to a point without the State as its ultimate destination.

In this case Columbus, New Mexico, was fixed and determined upon by the shipper as the destination of the cattle both before and at the time they were shipped. The course of dealing between Kingsbury and the railway companies in which he arranged for the cars, makes it plain that his purpose was to ship the cattle, not to El Paso, Texas, but to Columbus, New Mexico, direct, and by a continuous and uninterrupted journey, using the line of the plaintiff in error from Valentine to El Paso for one stage of the journey, and the line of the El Paso Southwestern Railway from El Paso to Columbus for its completion. It is equally plain from the facts found by the trial court that the shipment was thus made; that no delivery of the cattle by the plaintiff in error at El Paso was either contemplated or effected; that before the arrival of the cattle at El Paso, Anthony, who was in charge of the shipments as the representative of the defendant in error, directed that the cars be delivered to the connecting carrier to which they were delivered, and by it carried to destination, making a continuous journey from Valentine, Texas, to Columbus, New Mexico, without break or interruption.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 538, 105 Tex. 178, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-v-wood-hagenbarth-cattle-tex-1912.