Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Gatewood

14 S.W. 913, 79 Tex. 89, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1493
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1890
DocketNo. 6689
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 913 (Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Gatewood) 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
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Gatewood, 14 S.W. 913, 79 Tex. 89, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1493 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

ACKER, Presiding Judge.

On the first day of March, 1886, the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company received from W. H. Gate-wood, at Blum Station in Hill County, Texas, three car loads of cattle, sixty in number, to be transported to Chicago in the State of Illinois, for the consideration of $105 per car, and there delivered to Gregory, Cooley & Co. The cattle were not delivered at Chicago until the 5th day of April, 1886, and Gatewood brought this suit against the railway company on the 21st day of June, 1886, to recover damages as follows: For decrease in weight and value of cattle caused by delay in transporting them to their destination, $600; for difference in market price of the cattle at the date of their delivery in Chicago and at the date when they should have been delivered there, $491.31; for board and hire of hands during the time the cattle were delayed, $60; for overcharge in freight and feed bills, $400.

The cattle were received by the railway company and shipped under a written contract, in which Gatewood expressly waived and relinquished* to the company and its connecting lines all right to any damages he might otherwise have claimed, and expressly assumed all risk of damage resulting from delay in the transportation of the cattle occasioned by any mob or strike or threatened violence to person or property. By said contract it was provided and mutually agreed that no suit or action for the recovery of any claim thereunder should be sustainable unless such suit or action was commenced in forty days next after the damage occurred, and [92]*92that should any suit be brought after the expiration of said forty days the lapse of time should be’ taken as conclusive evidence against the validity of the claim sued on.

It was further stipulated in said contract and agreed to between the parties that in case the cattle were to be transported over the road of any other company the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Company should be released from liability of every kind after the cattle left its road, except to protect the through rate of freight.

This contract was specially pleaded by the defendant in answer to plaintiff’s cause of action; and the defendant further answered that plaintiff ought not to recover, because if the cattle were delayed and not transported to Chicago in the usual and ordinary time, and were reduced in flesh, etc., as alleged, that the same was not attributable to the negligence of defendant, but was owing to a strike on the Missouri Pacific and Texas & Pacific railway lines; and that the cattle were shipped from Blum to Fort Worth in due time and in good condition, and were at once and many times afterwards tendered to those companies, and they would not receive them, and could not do so,-because the employes of said companies had abandoned their employment and refused to work, and banded themselves together for the purpose of preventing any other persons taking their places, and did prevent all persons from taking their places and working for said companies for thirty days from March 1, 1886, and that said companies made all efforts to and did provide other laborers to’take the places of those who had refused to work, but the employes so refusing would not allow the persons so employed to work; and the strikers did take possession of the engines, cars, and trains of said companies, and would not allow them to run their trains out of the city of Fort Worth, and that these lines of railway are the only practical ways of carrying cattle from Fort Worth to Chicago; and that the military forces were called out to quell said strike; and that therefore the delay in shipping said cattle was caused by a vis major, which defendant could not prevent or overcome; and specially pleaded the contract of plaintiff in regard to damage by mob force or strike in bar of recovery; and further specially pleaded that plaintiff did not bring the suit in forty days after damage occurred, and that therefore his claim was barred by the limitation of time agreed upon in the contract.

The trial resulted in verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $1021, and defendant appealed. It appears from the evidence that at the time the contract was entered into both parties contemplated that the cattle should be transported from Fort Worth over the lines of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. The cattle arrived at Fort Worth on the morning of March 2, 1886, accompanied by plaintiff’s brother, and were promptly tendered to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, which refused to receive them because of its inability to move its freight trains in consequence [93]*93of a strike which had that day been inaugurated by the employes of that company and by the employes of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company.

On refusal of the Missouri Pacific Company to receive the cattle they were taken out of the cars and put into the stock pens of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company at Port Worth, and remained there until the 20th day of March, when they were shipped to Chicago over the line of that company at a cost of $110 per car. Plaintiff’s brother remained with the cattle at Port Worth several days and returned to his home, after which plaintiff was in Port Worth and saw the cattle there in the pens.

Plaintiff was not notified when the cattle left Port Worth for Chicago, and sent' no agent or representative with them. The cattle were delivered by the Illinois Central Railway Company to the consignees in Chicago— Gregory, Cooley & Co.—on the 5th day of April, and on that day sold by the consignees for the gross sum of $2316.18. When the cattle were delivered they were not billed in the name of any one, and were received by the consignees and entered on their books in the name of the last carrier, the Illinois Central Railway Company, to which all charges for freight and feed were payable, though the consignees knew when they received the cattle that they belonged to plaintiff, one of them having seen the cattle in the pen at Port Worth and the firm having advanced plaintiff money on them.

A few days after the cattle left -Port Worth plaintiff presented to defendent’s agent there a claim for $1560 damages for delay in transporting the cattle to Chicago. During the time the cattle were delayed at Fort Worth the defendant repeatedly tendered them to both the Missouri Pacific and the Texas & Pacific Railway companies, who refused to receive them because of their inability to move their freight trains on account of the strike.

On the 5th day of April the brokers, Gregory, Cooley & Co., to whom the cattle were consigned made an account of sale of the cattle in the name of the Illinois Central Railway Company and sent it to plaintiff, who received it on the 12th day of April, 1886. The account of sale showed an expense account paid by the brokers for freight, feed, yardage, and commissions of $802.65, and net proceeds $1513.53. Between the 24=th day of April and the 1st day of May, 1886, the defendant notified the plaintiff that his claim for damages would not be paid.

The foregoing is a substantial statement of the facts bearing upon the only two'questions we deem it necessary to consider, and they are presented by the twelfth assignment of error, under which it is contended that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, first, because it clearly appears that more than forty days had elapsed from the time plaintiff’s cause of action accrued before the institution of the suit; and second, because it appears that if plaintiff sustained any damage it was not caused [94]

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 913, 79 Tex. 89, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-colorado-santa-fe-railway-co-v-gatewood-tex-1890.