Garrow, McClain & Garrow v. Allen

260 S.W. 887, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 303
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1924
DocketNo. 1618.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 887 (Garrow, McClain & Garrow v. Allen) 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
Garrow, McClain & Garrow v. Allen, 260 S.W. 887, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 303 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

R. D. Allen brought this suit against Abilene & Southern Railway Company and Garrow, McClain & Garrow, a corporation, to recover damages alleged to have been caused by their negligence in transporting, handling, and storing 84 bales of his cotton.

*888 The petition alleged, and the uncontra-dicted proof showed, that on the 30th day of December, 1920, Allen delivered 84 bales of cotton to the above-named railway company at Abilene, Tex., to he transported by it to Houston, Tex., and there delivered to Oar-row, McOlain & Garrow, engaged in the factory and warehouse business, to be stored by said warehouseman pending sale of said cotton. The 84 bales of cotton reached Houston, and were received by Garrow, McOlain & Garrow on the 7th and 8th days of January, 1921, and by that corporation kept and stored, except as hereinafter stated, until the 14th of July, 1921, when the cotton was sold.

The allegations of negligence in the petition are as follows:

“That in transporting said cotton and in storing and keeping the same in the warehouse as hereinabove set out the defendants carelessly and negligently handled said cotton, and by careless and negligent handling on the part of said defendants said cotton became damaged and wasted; that said cotton on account of such negligent handling was damaged to such an extent as to cause a loss of 2,428 pounds, and but for said damage said cotton would have been worth $12.40 per hundred pounds, which was the reasonable market value of said cotton' at Houston, Texas, at the time same was sold by defendant Garrow, McClain & Garrow, and at the time same was injured; that on account of said damage so done by defendants 2,428 pounds of cotton was sold by defendant Garrow, McOlain & Garrow at and for a price of one cent per pound, by reason whereof, the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $259.67 on account of the damage to said cotton; that in addition to damaging said cotton and causing a loss to this plaintiff on account of the damaged condition the said defendant Garrow, McClain & Garrow, in whose possession said cotton was and whose duty it was to care for same, charged to this plaintiff the sum of $45.22 for picking said cotton, being labor performed on said cotton on account of the damages thereto, which damages were occa: sioned by the negligence of the defendants as herein set out. Said defendant withheld said sum of $45.75 from this plaintiff and charged the same to this plaintiff’s account at the time it Sold said cotton, to plaintiff’s further damages in the sum of $45.75; that said defendant Garrow, McClain & Garrow charged to the account of this plaintiff and withheld from this plaintiff the sum of $42 for coverings on said cotton, which coverings, if actually put on said cotton and if actually needed on said cotton, were required to be placed thereon by the negligence of said defendants in damaging said cotton and permitting the same to become damaged as hereinabove, set out, and that the defendants were in duty bound to recover said cotton if the same needed recovering on account of said damage, and said defendant unlawfully and wrongfully charged the same to the account, of this plaintiff and unlawfully, withheld said amount from this plaintiff to his fur.ther damage in the sum of $41.22, making a total damage to this plaintiff in the sum of $347.42, all of which damage to this plaintiff was, occasioned by the negligence of the defendants in transporting and storing said cotton, and all said damage happened to said cotton while in possession of said defendants on account of failure of defendants to exercise the care required of them in transporting and storing said cotton.”

Garrow, McOlain & Garrow urged special exceptions to the petition on the grounds: That it states but a conclusion of the pleader, and does not apprise it of the exact damage claimed, and the nature and extent of the same to each bale of cotton; that it does not state which of the defendants caused the damage complained of; that the pleading is indefinite and,insufficient in that it fails to specify the amount of the damages and' the cause of the damage charged against it, and the amount and cause of the damage claimed against the said railway company.

The court overruled the above special exceptions, and Garrow, McOlain & Garrow excepted.

Garrow, McOlain & Garrow also answered by general denial, and specially answered that said cotton was kept by it in waterproof warehouses constructed of concrete and steel so as to exclude all of the elements, sun, rain, and wind, and that the cotton was received by it in a damaged condition from exposure to such elements, and that it became necessary to pick and rewrap portions of said cotton to render it marketable, and to place new covers thereon, and that the charges of $45.22 for picking and $41.22 for recovering was a reasonable and proper charge for said services, and that the loss of 2,428 pounds arose from the necessity of picking said cotton, which was damaged when received.

The railroad company answered by general demurrer and' general denial.

The case was tried with a jury and submitted upon special issues. The jury found that the cotton was not damaged by reason of any negligence of the railroad company while being transported from Abilene to Houston. The jury also found that the cotton was damaged by reason of the negligence of Garrow, McOlain &■ Garrow while in its possession, and that the amount of money that would reasonably compensate Allen for the damages sustained to his cotton was $300. Upon the answers to the special issues the court rendered judgment in favor of the railroad company and in favor of Allen against Garrow, McOlain & Garrow for $300, with interest from the date of the judgment.

Opinion.

The petition alleged that all of the cotton was in good condition when delivered except 17 bales which were slightly damaged; that in transporting the cotton, and in storing and keeping the cotton in the warehouse defendants carelessly and negligently han- *889 died the cotton, and that by careless and negligent handling the cotton became damaged and wasted. Evidently the allegations as to negligence in the transportation of the cotton refer exclusively to the railroad company, and negligence in storing, keeping, and handling the cotton had reference to plaintiff in error.

Are the allegations of negligence as to storing, keeping, and handling the cotton sufficient as against a special exception pointing out that the statements are but conclusions of the pleader, and insufficient to charge negligence in not apprising defendant (plaintiff in error) of the exact damage and waste and the nature, extent, or cause of same?

It is elementary and statutory in this state that the petition shall set forth a full and .clear statement of the cause of action, that is, the facts which constitute the cause of action. A mere abstract proposition that defendant, a warehouseman, was guilty of negligence in handling-the cotton which resulted in injury to plaintiff, is not sufficient as against an exception pointing out that the pleading does not state the concrete facts which caused the damage and waste to the cotton. The act done or omitted to be done upon which plaintiff relies to show a want of ordinary care in handling the cotton, that is, negligence, must be averred and proved. Missouri Pacif.

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260 S.W. 887, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrow-mcclain-garrow-v-allen-texapp-1924.