Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Kempner

275 S.W. 459, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 752
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 1925
DocketNo. 8685.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 459 (Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Kempner) 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
Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Kempner, 275 S.W. 459, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 752 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

GRATES, J.

The gist of this cause as pre- ' sented here, both as to substance and procedure, is this:

On September 10, 1920, through telegraphic correspondence between them, J. G. Ramsey at Edinburg, Tex., agreed to sell to H. Kemp-ner, at Galveston, Tex., 25 bales of cotton “loaded to arrive in Galveston, immediate shipment.” Pursuant to such contract of sale, on the next day, September 11, 1920, he delivered the 25 bales to the Brownsville Railway Company at Edinburg, receiving from that company a through bill of lading therefor, showing the cotton to. be consigned to his order, destination Galveston, Tex., notify Kempner, and describing it as marked “L. T. B.” This arrangement meant tliat Ramsey was to load the cotton at Edinburg, which he did, stating to the initial carrier’s agent at the time that he would have each bale of it marked L. T. B. but failing in fact to do so, and the agent delivering to him the bjll of lading so reciting without the marking having been put on. Ramsey then drew on Kempner for their agreed purchase price, attaching this bill of lading properly indorsed by himself to Kempner, which papers were received in due course by the latter, who paid the draft at Galveston before the arrival there of the cotton.

Kempner’s trustees, the defendants in error, indorsed the bill to their representative, the Compress Company, which at once turned the same over to the Santa Fé Railway Company, the plaintiff in error, at the same time notifying it of the ownership of the cotton by defendants in “error and directing that delivery be made to it, the Compress Company, for them. The Santa Fé Company, through its agent, accepted the bill of lading, issuing its receipt therefor to the Compress Company, and agreed to deliver the cotton to Kempner when it should arrive in Galveston. The shipment of cotton, thus without the marking called for in the bill of lading,' went forward promptly from Edinburg, reaching Galveston September 17, 1920.

Coincident with the arrival of the shipment in Galveston, the Santa Fé’s office there received a waybill covering 25 bales of cotton marked L. T. B., supposed to have been shipped in Renn. Car 16541; when that car was opened on the same day, however, it was found to contain no cotton marked D. T. B., but did contain 25 bales of various other mhrks. The Santa F'é’s freight clerk, after having taken, the matter up with the sending agent of the Brownsville Road at Edinburg and being advised by letter from him that the cotton in the car was the same as that intended to be covered by the waybill and bill of lading, on September 27, 1920, and before any checking of the gin numbers it bore had been made with the numbers called for in the bill of lading, by telephone offered to deliver it to defendants in error, which tender they refused on the ground that the marks were not the same and the identity had not been established. A similar tender, conditioned, however, on defendant's in error proving that this particular lot of cotton was theirs, made to another of their agents either a few days before or after September 27 — -whether one or the other date not being clear from the testimony — was likewise declined. Thereafter the cotton remained on the railway company’s platform, it retaining *461 possession of the bill of lading all the while, until on November 10, 1920, its freight clerk, in conjunction with a representative of defendants in error, for the first time checked the tag numbers on the bales with those called for by the bill of lading, and found them identical. Tender of delivery was again made on that date, and also refused by defendants in error upon the same ground.

No cotton marked D. T.i B. as described in the bill of lading was ever turned oyer to. Kempner, but on April 19, 1921, by special arrangement between the parties, 25 bales bearing other marks were received by defendants in error from the railway company under agreement to apply the value thereof in part payment of their claim for damages against plaintiff in error for failure to promptly deliver the specific 25 bales described in the bill of lading.

The suit was by them to recover the alleged balance due of such damages, based on their claim that their cotton should have — as upon reasonable dispatch — been delivered to them on September 17, Í920, instead of on April 19, 1921, the date they thus accepted a settlement, measuring the amount claimed by the difference in market values on the dates so fixed.

The trial court, on a finding to the effect that the identity of the cotton as theirs had béen made reasonably certain on November 10, 1920, but not before, concluded that they should have accepted it on that date and gave them judgment for the difference in the market values of the 25 bales on September 17, when it actually arrived in Galveston and should have been delivered in the exercise of reasonable diligence, and on November 10, when they became in duty bound to receive it. There were other fact findings as to the values on the dates involved, about which there is no controversy, and to the effect that the bill of lading misdescribing the cotton as being marked L. T. B. was issued through the negligence of the initial carrier, the Brownsville Company, without the knowledge at the time of either party" to this suit; such negligence being the sole cause of the delay in the tender at Houston of the 25'bales in question.

On the appeal the plaintiff in error, in the face of the finding just noted that the mismarking and consequent delay were due entirely to the negligence of the initial carrier, and without -attacking it as lacking support in the evidence but relying thereon as correctly reflecting the record, seeks' a reversal on propositions to the effect: First that the delay in the delivery of the cotton being caused by the act of the shipper, Ramsey, in not marking it as he agreed to do, the culpatory act was that of another for which neither carrier was liable; second, that no negligence on its part being shown, plaintiff in error, as the terminal carrier, was not re- ■ spionsible for the delay complained of, -since it was found by the trial court-to be solely due to the. negligence: of the '.initial carrier.

This position is untenable, because grounded on a distinct tangent from the fairway of fact upon which the adverse .'judgment rested and of the law as declared in our statutes. See Yernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, arts. 710, 715, 716 of 1914, and articles 731, 732 of 1922 Supplement.

Plaintiff in error was bound by the determination of fact that the error in issuing the bill of lading and the consequent delay were due -to the negligence of its connecting line, the receiving carrier, and that being true, the question involved is reduced to one of whether or not it, as the delivering carrier, was also bound to answer to the owners of the cotton for the consequences of that negligence. That it was, under the further fact^ here appearing, we think the statutes referred to plainly declare.

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Related

Southwest Title Insurance Co. v. Northland Building Corp.
542 S.W.2d 436 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1976)
Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Kempner
282 S.W. 795 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 459, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-c-s-f-ry-co-v-kempner-texapp-1925.