Kemendo v. Fruit Dispatch Co.

131 S.W. 73, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 631, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 818
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 73 (Kemendo v. Fruit Dispatch 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
Kemendo v. Fruit Dispatch Co., 131 S.W. 73, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 631, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 818 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

RICE, Associate Justice.

— The Fruit Dispatch Company, a Kew York corporation, doing business in the city of BTew Orleans, instituted this suit on the 5th day of March, 1908, against Y. Kemendo, for the recovery of $862.00 for two car loads of bananas sold by it to him, and which were delivered by it under the contract of sale to him f. o. h. cars at Kew Orleans on the 1st and 16th days of Kovember, 1906, and were thereafter transported over the lines of railway hereinafter mentioned, and received by him at Waco.

It is conceded that the statement of the nature and result of the suit, as made in the brief of appellants is correct. We therefore copy the same so far as relates to the pleadings of Kemendo and the railway companies who were interpleaded by his cross-action.

Kemendo, by way of answer and cross-action, alleged that the car of bananas purchased on Bovember 1st was delivered by plaintiff to Morgan’s Louisiana & Texas Railroad & Steamship Company (hereinafter designated Morgan’s Company for convenience) at Kew Orleans, for which it issued a bill of lading for said bananas, and consigned in car I. C. 55374, to Y. Kemendo, Waco, Texas, via “Katy,” Houston (meaning M. K. & T. Railway Co.) that on the 16th day of Kovember plaintiff delivered to Morgan’s Company at Kew Orleans the other car of bananas, likewise consigned to Kemendo at Waco, via “Katy,” Houston, loaded in car I. C. 52129; that both shipments under the contract of purchase were to he good, sound, green bananas, it being necessary that they he green in order to insure safe shipment; and both shipments were in special cars constructed for the shipment of fruit, and under the contract of shipment, each car was to be accompanied *637 by an agent of the Fruit Dispatch Company to destination, for the purpose of taking care of said fruit; that Kemendo had directed plaintiff that both cars be shipped via M. K. & T. Bailway Co. from Houston to Waco, as he made special arrangements with that company to take special care of said shipments over its route by keeping the vents and plugs in said'cars regulated, so as to protect the fruit from climatic changes; that both cars were diverted at Houston to the H. & T. C. Bailroad Company, by the direction and consent of the messengers accompanying said cars, and were delivered to Kemendo by the Central Company at Waco in a damaged condition; that had they been transported over the M. K. & T. Bailway from Houston,.as directed, they would have been properly cared for under the special arrangement made with that company by defendant, and would have reached him in good condition, and defendant would have long since paid therefor.

By way of cross-action Kemendo averred that the two cars of bananas were delivered to Morgan’s Company at Hew Orleans and transported to Houston over that line and the Louisiana Western, and The Texas and Hew Orleans Bailway Company’s lines; that at Houston said cars were diverted by the above named three railway companies in violation of the contract of carriage and Kemendo’s instructions to the Central Company, and by it carried to Waco and delivered to Kemendo in a damaged condition. It is further alleged that after said cars of bananas were diverted at Houston and delivered to the H. & T. C. Company, the latter was guilty of negligence in handling and caring for same between Houston and Waco, and both shipments were damaged by reason of improper handling and delay; that the bananas in car Ho. 55374 were damaged by becoming overheated, and those in car Ho. 53139 by being frozen; both cars were accompanied by messengers to Houston. It is alleged that the railroad companies carrying said shipments were partners and that the contract of shipment was joint. Kemendo prajred for judgment against all of said railroad defendants for the contract price of the bananas and freight paid by him thereon, asking to go hence as to plaintiffs cause of action, but should judgment be rendered against him in favor of plaintiff, that he have judgment over against the four railroad companies for a like amount and freight paid and for general relief.

The defendant railway companies filed separate answers, making common defenses as to a misjoinder of parties and causes of action, denial of partnership; that said shipments were not made under through bills of lading but under a contract limiting the liability of each carrier to loss or damage done or suffered on its own line, and that said shipments were made and accepted under bills of lading whereby it was expressly stipulated that a person termed “a messenger,” agent of the shipper, should accompany said shipments, for the purpose of taking care of the same as to the regulation of the temperature of said cars, and for that purpose said cars were in the entire control of such messenger, and that said cars were “to be iced or not iced, as said messenger might direct;” that whatever damage had been done to said shipments was the proximate result of the negligence of said messenger, who accompanied said cars, and the violation of the contract under which said shipments were accepted; that if the shipments were diverted *638 at Houston from the M. K. & T. to the H. & T. C. Company, it was done by the messenger in charge of the same or by the T. & N. O. Railway Co.; that Kemendo was promptly notified of said diversion by the messenger in charge, and under the contract of shipment it was his duty to see that the ventilation of said cars was properly looked after, and to ascertain the line over which said shipments were to be brought to Waco, and his failure in this regard was negligence proximately contributing to his loss; that if there was any damage suffered, it was the result of a strike and stoppage of labor and threatened violence to the property of defendants along their lines of railway over which said shipments were made, and for which defendants are exempt under the express terms of the contract of shipment.

The T. & N. O. Railway Co. and the Louisiana & Western Ry. Co. plead to the jurisdiction of the court as to the amount involved and the statutes of limitation of two years. The defendant railroad companies also plead a general denial as to the cause of action set up by plaintiff as well as that of Kemendo.

The court overruled the general and special exceptions to the misjoinder of parties and causes of action, but directed a verdict in behalf of the plaintiff Fruit Dispatch Co. against Kemendo for $971.70, and also in favor of the T. & N. O. Railway Co. and the Louisiana Western Ry. Co., but submitted the case to the jury upon the issues made-by the pleadings as between defendants Kemendo and Morgan’s Company and the H. & T. C. R. R. Co., which resulted in a verdict in behalf of Kemendo for $888 against Morgan’s Company and the H. & T. C. R. R. Co. While motions for new trial were made in behalf of Kemendo, as well as the two railway companies last named, yet said companies alone have appealed, and by their first assignment insist that the court erred in overruling'their special exception to Kemendo’s cross-action, wherein they excepted thereto upon the ground that there was a misjoinder of parties and causes of action; and by their proposition thereunder insist that since the cause of action asserted by the Fruit Dispatch Co. against Kemendo was ex contractu,

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 73, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 631, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemendo-v-fruit-dispatch-co-texapp-1910.