International-Great Northern R. v. Singer Iron & Steel Co.

96 S.W.2d 1003, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 855
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 1936
DocketNo. 10200.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 S.W.2d 1003 (International-Great Northern R. v. Singer Iron & Steel Co.) 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
International-Great Northern R. v. Singer Iron & Steel Co., 96 S.W.2d 1003, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 855 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

The appellant, as plaintiff, sued the ap-pellee, as defendant, below for demurrage on in-coming cars of scrap iron shipped over the former’s lines to the latter at the Port of Houston, and which had been held by the railroad while awaiting instructions from the steel company or which had not been unloaded by the latter within the allowed free time; the only question involved there or here is, which one of two separate demurrage-tariffs, that is, the local one known as American Railway Association Freight Tariff, T. B. Jones, agent, the other, which is applicable only to export shipments originally .billed or declared for export “provided delivery is made direct from cars to shipside,” known as Texas Lines Tariff, A. C. Fonda, agent, applies; the problem as to which of these tariffs should be applied is in turn solvable by whether or not, under the peculiar facts here obtaining, the yard of the steel company is located at “shipside,” as that term is used in the applicable demurrage tariffs; appellant contended there and still does here that the regular domestic tariff applied, while the appellee insisted that the export rate applied, they agreeing that if appellant was right there was due it $2,066, whereas only $308 was due it if the appellee was right.

The learned trial court, before whom the cause was tried without a jury, took the view that the export rate applied, and accordingly gave the appellant judgment for the agreed $308 in that contingency, supporting its conclusion by these findings of fact and law:

“Findings of Fact.
“I. It is admitted by the parties, by agreement in open court, that if export de-murrage rates apply on all the cars involved in the suit, then defendant is indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $308, but if domestic demurrage rates apply on all cars involved, then defendant is indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $2,066.
“II. It is admitted that defendant tendered into court the sum of $308.
“III. Defendant has been engaged in the business of exporting scrap iron and •steel in the city of Houston, Tex., since the latter part of the year 1919, and during all that time its place of business and yards have been at and behind dock or wharf 3, at and behind dock or wharf 10, and at and behind wharf site No. 9, its present location. These wharves or docks are public wharves, under the control of Houston Navigation District.
“IV. Defendant’s scrap iron, or shipments involved in this suit, are unloaded from the cars and held in defendant’s yard pending arrival of boats or accumulation of cargo.
“V. The several grades of iron on arrival are unloaded from the cars in defendant’s yard, and each grade is kept separate.
*1004 “VI. The identical scrap iron which is unloaded from the cars is subsequently loaded into the ships for export, except that in some few instances (about 1 per cent.) whenever any of the scrap iron is so bulky or irregular in shape as to make it difficult of accommodation into the ship’s berth, the same is reduced in size by cutting so as to facilitate the loading of the ship.
“VII. Nothing is done to the iron, for the purpose of changing its grade, or class, or for the purpose of sale, and the iron is handled solely for the purpose of facilitating loading in a steamer.
“VIII. Before loading into steamers, defendant’s scrap iron must be weighed by the railroad company, and the defendant pays the railroad company a charge for this service.
“IX. The scales of the railroad company are located some distance from defendant’s yards, that is in the ‘North Yard,’ and for that reason it is necessary for defendant, before loading the scrap iron into ships, to switch the cars to defendant’s ‘North Yard.’ For this switching service defendant pays the railroad company a switching charge, in addition to the weighing charge. Defendant’s yard, as well as the ‘North Yard’ are all within the ‘Port’ limits of area, officially known as the ‘Navigation District of the Port of Houston.’
“X. After the cars have been switched to the ‘North Yard’ for weighing, they are then switched to the particular wharf or dock at which the particular boat, into which the scrap iron is to be loaded, is berthed.
“XI. When defendant’s yards were located adjacent to wharf 10, its scrap iron was handled in the identical manner as at its present location, and according to the customs and practices of the Port regarded as a ‘shipside’ location.
“XII. When defendant’s yards were located adjacent to dock or wharf 3, its material was handled in the same manner as at its present location, and according to the customs and practices of the port, regarded as a ‘shipside’ location.
“XIII. When defendant’s yards were located adjacent to dock or wharf 3, the material was dumped on the ground in front' — on the apron of the wharf — and when the actual wharf area became filled with defendant’s material, defendant was permitted to unload the material behind wharf 4, something like 1,400 or 2,000 feet away from the dock; the amount of ground behind the wharf used by defendant depending upon the amount of scrap iron on hand at any particular time, and whether a ship was available.
“XIV. When defendant was located adjacent to dock or wharf 3, its material, when ready, preparatory to loading into ships, was reloaded into cars and weighed. The material was taken out or switched from the yards by the Port Terminal Railroad Company to the place where the scales were located, and then brought all the way back, sometimes back behind docks one and two until it reached No. -3, and sometimes in the opposite direction depending upon which was convenient to the railroad company.
“XV. When defendant was located adjacent to dock or wharf 10, it unloaded or stored its material, awaiting the arrival of a ship, alongside of the apron of the wharf, and what could not be accommodated was stored on the solid ground behind the wharf, and on the solid ground behind the tracks on the land side, extending back and away from the wharf a distance of approximately 600 to 700 feet.
“XVI. When defendant was located at wharf 10, even the material that was actually placed on the wharf was, prior to the loading into ships, loaded into cars, switched to the north yard for weighing, and brought back to dock or wharf 10, and set alongside the ship.
“XVII. In certain instances, where defendant’s stevedores attempted to use the crane to switch cars down to the ship when defendant was located at wharf 10, the Port Commission objected and took the position that their engines had to make every move, even if it was only ten feet, as required by proper practice of the port.
“XVIII. The early part of 1929, wharf No. 10 began to sink, because of the weight of defendant’s material, and defendant was moved, by direction of the Port Commission, to its present location designated as wharf site 9.
“XIX. There is no wharf for loading purposes at wharf 9, the present location of defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.W.2d 1003, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-great-northern-r-v-singer-iron-steel-co-texapp-1936.