Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Mayes

44 Tex. Civ. App. 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 44 Tex. Civ. App. 31 (Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Mayes) 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
Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Mayes, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 31 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

FTSHEB, Chief Justice.

This was a suit by Gordon Mayes and I. W. Williams against the Houston & Texas Central Bailroad Company, the International & Great Horthern Bailroad Company, and the Texas & Pacific Bailway Company, to recover $670 damages to a shipment -of thirty head of horses and mules, made October 4, 1904, from Llano, Texas, to Waskom, Texas, over the lines of said -defendants, thence overland to Shreveport, Louisiana, thence by rail to Jackson, Mississippi. Trial October 20, 1905, resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs [34]*34against the Houston & Texas Central Railroad Company for $167.50, against the International & Great Northern Railroad Company for $167.50 (both said sums with interest at 6 percent per annum from October 6, 1904), and in favor of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company. From this judgment the appellants have appealed.

There is no error by either party assigned questioning the judgment in favor of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company. Therefore, as to it, the judgment below stands affirmed.

The shipment is treated as wholly within this State, from Llano to Waskom, both places in Texas, although ultimately extended to Jackson, Mississippi. The appellees relied upon a paroi contract of shipment made with the first named road, from Llano to Waskom, point of destination. The connecting lines over which the stock was transported were the other two named roads. Subsequent to the verbal contract with the Houston & Texas Central Railway, and after stock were loaded at Llano for shipment, the appellees and that road entered into a written contract wherein the liability of the latter was limited to its own line, and the burden was imposed upon the shipper to load and unload and feed and water the stock while in transit. When the shipment reached McNeill, the connecting point with the International & Great Northern Railway, the appellees were then required to and did enter into a written contract with the International & Great Northern Railway for the transportation of the stock to Longview, with Waskom named as destination. This written agreement prescribed that the railway company would not be liable for any damages not caused by its negligence, and that appellees should load and unload, feed and water the stock, and should furnish the bed and bedding required in the cars, and should as a condition precedent to their right to recover damages, give within ninety-one days written notice -to some general officer or agent of the company of the loss, damages or injury sustained.

The answer of the last named road charges the plaintiffs with a knowledge of the names and existence of agents of the road at certain places, and avers that the notice required by the contract was not given. This written contract was also pleaded in order to show a breach in the contract of shipment as made with the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company.

The written contracts were attempted to be avoided' on the ground that they were executed after the cattle were loaded upon the cars, without any additional consideration, and under circumstances showing duress, and that' their terms were unjust and unreasonable. In other words, the purpose was to bring the plaintiffs’ case within the principles discussed in Carter’s Case, 29 S. W. Rep., 565.

The plaintiffs pleaded as negligence that both roads unreasonably delayed the shipment, and both were guilty of rough handling and treatment of the stock; that they both and each failed to properly bed the cars, and that the cars were negligently bedded by permitting rocks to be mixed with sand, and that nails were permitted to project on the inside of the cars to such an extent as to cause injury to the animals.

Whether the theory of the plaintiffs that the verbal contract should control finds support in the evidence, is a question that we need not determine, because the trial court in subdivision 10a of its charge, [35]*35which appellees do not object to, instructed the jury that the rights of the parties should be governed by the written contracts; but further instructed them that any unjust or unreasonable stipulations therein contained were not binding upon the plaintiffs. This instruction, presumably acquiesced in by appellees, excluded from the consideration of the jury the verbal contract, and permitted them only to consider the rights of the litigants as determined by those provisions of the written agreements which were reasonable and just. Therefore upon this branch of the case we must treat the written contracts as binding and fixing the rights of the parties, except as to those stipulations, if any, that should be held unreasonable. With this statement we will consider the record as it affects the I. & G. N. R. R. Co.

Article 3379, Sayles Civil Statutes in effect provides that the shipper and carrier may enter into a contract requiring notice of the claim of damages to be given the carrier as a condition precedent to the right to sue, provided such stipulation is reasonable, and that the time fixed shall not be less than ninety days. And further says that such notice may be given to the nearest or other convenient local agent. The facts pleaded by the I. & G. N. Ry. bring the contract within the provisions of this statute; and the appellees in reply, by a supplemental petition, do not allege that this particular stipulation of the contract is unreasonable, or point out any facts which would make it so. All that they allege upon this subject are the facts tending to avoid the written contract in toto, and a general statement that the contract was to be wholly performed in this State, and that as the same was without consideration, and was unreasonable, it was a limitation upon their liability as a common carrier which they contend avoids the entire contract as written. Of course, since the passage of the act above quoted, it is permissible and lawful for the parties to enter into a contract, provided it is reasonable, requiring a notice not less than 90 days after injury of the presentation of a claim for damages, and upon failure to do so, suit will be barred. In the case made by the appellant in urging this stipulation there was nothing to suggest that it was not reasonable, and if we could assume that the burden was upon it to establish the facts showing that it was reasonable (Houston & T. C. Ry. v. Davis, 88 Texas, 594) the pleading presenting the issue and the evidence in support of it clearly meet this requirement. The trial court having settled the matter that the written contract should govern, and the stipulation referred to being permitted by the statute, and there being no issue that this particular stipulation was inserted into the contract by fraud or mistake, we must determine the reasonableness of the stipulation by the circumstances existing within the time when the shipper is required to perform it. To so consider the matter it appears upon the face of the instrument that it was not limited to a less time than allowed by law. The petition of the plaintiffs alleges and admits that the appellant I. & G. N. R. R. Co. has an agent at Austin, Texas. The evidence shows that he signed a written contract with the appellant’s agent at McNeil, the point of connection with the H. & T. C. Railway. The plaintiff Mayes testified that he presented no claim himself, but it was only presented through his attorneys, and he says while he does not know the name of the agent at McNeil, he had dealings with him, and [36]

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Related

Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Davis
32 S.W. 510 (Texas Supreme Court, 1895)
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Lynch
75 S.W. 486 (Texas Supreme Court, 1903)
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Carter
29 S.W. 565 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
44 Tex. Civ. App. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-texas-central-railroad-v-mayes-texapp-1906.