Glaser v. N. O. T. & M. Ry. Co.

120 So. 798, 10 La. App. 755, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 187
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1929
DocketNo. 11,657
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 120 So. 798 (Glaser v. N. O. T. & M. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glaser v. N. O. T. & M. Ry. Co., 120 So. 798, 10 La. App. 755, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 187 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

JONES, J.

Plaintiff sues for $1,185 as damages to 47 head of mixed cattle, shipped by him on March 1, 1927, from Lottie, La., to C. H. Rice & Son, in New Orleans, over the lines of the New Orleans, Texas & Mexico Railway Company. He alleges that the cattle, which were in good condition, cost him $1,347, but when car reached New Orleans on March 3, 1927, 8 of the cattle had died in transit, and between that day and March 11, 1927, when cattle were sold, 19 more died, all the deaths being due to the delay and negligent handling of the car by the railroads in not feeding and watering them; the remaining cattle, 20 head, when sold, netted the sum of $161.45, which amount, deducted from the cost price, caused the above-stated loss.

After filing the suit against the New Orleans, Texas & Mexico Railway Company plaintiff, having discovered that the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the New Orleans, Natalbany & Natchez Railway Company had participation in the shipment, filed a supplemental petition, making the latter two railroads parties defendant, and praying for solidary judgment against all three.

The railroads denied negligence and averred due care in handling the shipment. Both the New Orleans, Texas & Mexico Railway Company and the Illinois Central Railroad Company pleaded exemption of liability under the livestock contract from damages caused by disinfection of cattle, and averred that the cattle died as a result of dipping in an arsenic solution, for which they were not responsible.

[757]*757The New Orleans, Natalbany & Natchez Railway averred that it received the car of cattle from the Illinois Central Railroad Company at Natalbany, and that it only moved the car 3 miles to a dipping vat at Woodhaven, where the cattle were unloaded and dipped under the direct supervision of the plaintiff; that it then hauled the cattle back to Natalbany, where their responsibility ceased.

The trial judge allowed plaintiff a solidary judgment for $1,185.55 against the New Orleans, Texas & Mexico Railway Company and the Illinois Central Railroad Company, and dismissed plaintiff’s suit against the New Orleans, Natalbany & Natchez Railway Company, from which judgment of dismissal plaintiff Hid not appeal.

The record shows the following:

The cattle were loaded at 4 p. m., March 1st, at Lottie, La., on the lines of the New Orleans, Texas & Mexico Railway, and were promptly moved by this railway to Baton Rouge, where the car was received by the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, for account of the Baton Rouge, Hammond & Eastern Railway at 7:09 p. m., March 1st. The Baton Rouge, Hammond & Eastern moved the car out of Baton Rouge for Hammond at 10:55 p. m. on its first train. Ordinarily a shipment would go from Lottie to Baton Rouge, and thence direct to New Orleans over the lines of the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad, but these cattle were sent via Hammond, to be dipped, on instructions from plaintiff.

Plaintiff complains of 3-hour delay at Baton Rouge, but in view of the fact that this route was seldom used, and the cattle were shipped on the first train, we do not find that delay unreasonable. The shipment, which left Baton Rouge at 10:55 p. m., arrived at Hammond, 45 miles distant, at 12:45 a. m., March 2d, but did not leave there until 3 p. m. Here the first and perhaps only serious delay occurred, due to the fact that the agent of the New Orleans, Texas & Mexico at Lottie noted on the waybill that the car was to stop at Central Dipping Station, Hammond. This was an error, as the dipping station is not at Hammond, but at Woodhaven, La., on the lines of the New Orleans, Natalbany & Natchez Railway Company, 3 miles from Natalbany, the nearest point oii the Illinois Central Railroad. The car finally reached Natalbany at 3:15 and was there delivered to the New Orleans, Natalbany & Natchez Railway, fot transportation to Woodhaven, where the dipping vat was located. The ear reached the dipping vat at 4:20 p. m., and was there turned over to the plaintiff, Dr. Warren, the owner of the vat, and Dr. Ward, inspector of the Louisiana live stock sanitary board, and also agent of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry,' and one Bankston, who had been employed by plaintiff to assist in dipping the cattle.

These gentlemen, who had been requested by Glaser to be present, that the cattle might be quickly dipped, had no connection with the railroads.

At Natalbany one calf was found dead in the car, but the rest of the cattle were in fairly good condition, according to plaintiff’s own admission, except that they were tired from the trip. Though there was running water in the pen where the cattle were placed, all the witnesses say that they did not see them drink.

Dr. Ward testifies as follows: Cattle reached the vat about 4:30 p. m. He then told Glaser that it was dangerous to dip the cattle so late in the afternoon, as they would not have time to dry before ship[758]*758ping; but Glaser insisted on so doing, as he wished to get the cattle to New Orleans for the market of March 4th. Accordingly the cattle were dipped at once, and, after having remained in the shipping pen about an hour, they were reloaded, still wet with arsenic solution, and started- on their return journey to New Orleans; that cattle should be dipped in the morning, and they should be allowed 2% to 3 hours to dry out before loading; otherwise, they may absorb the arsenic solution, if they are packed in a car while wet.

Dr. Warren, owner of the vat, and Banks-ton, who was employed by Glaser to assist with the dipping, both confirm Dr. Ward as to what happened at 'the dipping vat, though Glaser denies it in part.

The car which left Woodhaven for Natalbany at 6:10 reached New Orleans on March 3d, at 10:45 a. m., having been stopped at Hammond 4y3 hours while waiting for a through train, and at Harahan 3 hours for orders from the Southern Railway official, with which railway the Illinois Central shares use of switch track to the stockyards.

The total distance covered by the cattle was 131 miles, and the time consumed was 26 hours.

When cattle arrived at the yards, one yearling was down and in dying condition, and 6 others were dead in the car. The yearling died before they could be unloaded, and 19 more died while in the stock pens of the consignee before the balance were sold on March 11th for $368.

Dr. Moore, a veterinarian of 30 years’ experience, who was requested by the Illinois Central Railroad to inspect the carcasses of the dead cattle, testified that he performed a post mortem on 7 of the cattle on March 3rd, about 3 or 4 hours after the arrival of the car, and that he found the cattle had died from arsenic poisoning; that later he performed another post mortem on 6 more of the cattle, and fouhd that they had died from the same cause; that in performing these post mortems he had removed the viscera from the cattle, and had subjected the viscera of two or three cows to a chemical test, which showed arsenic reactions, but that he had not conducted experiments on all 13, because the contents of the stomach of the others were in the same condition as those of the two actually tested; that arsenic ordinarily affects cattle in 12 to 54 hours, and that they absorb either by drinking the solution or through the skin, by being packed in the cars while damp.

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Related

Caldwell v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.
157 So. 790 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1934)
Bowie Lumber Co. v. Yazoo & Miss. Valley R. R.
131 So. 689 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 798, 10 La. App. 755, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glaser-v-n-o-t-m-ry-co-lactapp-1929.