McCarn v. International & Great Northern Railway Co.

16 L.R.A. 39, 19 S.W. 547, 84 Tex. 352, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 940
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1892
DocketNo. 7372.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 16 L.R.A. 39 (McCarn v. International & Great Northern Railway Co.) 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
McCarn v. International & Great Northern Railway Co., 16 L.R.A. 39, 19 S.W. 547, 84 Tex. 352, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 940 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

— This action was brought by appellant to recover damages for injury alleged to have been caused to sixty head of cattle while in transit from San Antonio, Texas, to Chicago, in the State of Illinois.

The cause was tried without a jury, and the court found, that “the contract for shipment was a through contract from San Antonio, Texas, to Chicago, Illinois,” but that the contract, among others, contained the following stipulation:

“And it is further stipulated- and agreed between the parties hereto, that in case the live stock mentioned herein is to be transported over the road or roads of any other railway company, the said party of the first part [appellee] shall be released from liability of every kind after said live stock shall have left its road; and the party of the second part hereby so expressly stipulates and agrees; the understanding of both parties hereto being that the party of the first part shall not be held or deemed liable for anything beyond the line of the International & Great Yorthern Railway Company, excepting to protect the through rate of freight named herein.”

The court further found, that no injury occurred to appellant’s cattle while on appellee’s line of railway, but that the cattle were injured while on a connecting line to which they had been delivered by appellee; and on these findings rendered a judgment against the plaintiff.

There is no statement of facts, and under the findings it must be conceded that appellee received the cattle under an agreement that they should be transported from San Antonio to Chicago; and the inference is that to do this it was necessary that they should pass over road or roads other than that of appellee. That in such a case a carrier may by contract protect itself against liability for loss not occurring on its own line, whether the shipment be wholly within this State or be interstate, we had-deemed a settled question in this court. Railway v. Baird, 75 Texas, 256; Railway v. Williams, 77 Texas, 121; Hunter v. Railway, 76 Texas, 195; Railway v. Adams, 78 Texas, 372; Harris v. Howe, 74 Texas, 537.

This is the rule we understand to be recognized by nearly all of the English and American courts. Myrick v. Railway, 107 U. S., 102; *354 Pratt v. Railway, 95 U. S. 43; Railway v. Pratt, 22 Wall., 123; Tardos v. Railway, 35 La. Ann., 15; Railway v. Meyer, 78 Ala., 597; Railway v. Brumley, 5 Lea, 401; Mulligan v. Railway, 36 Iowa, 186; Railway v. Bank, 20 Wis., 134; Pendergast v. Express Co., 101 Mass., 120; Berg v. Railway, 30 Kansas, 562; Railway v. Larned, 103 Ill., 293; Field v. Railway, 71 Ill., 462; Express Co. v. Bank, 69 Pa. St., 394; Ins. Co. v. Wheeler, 49 N. Y., 616; Snider v. Express Co., 63 Mo., 382; Taylor v. Railway, 32 Ark., 399; Railway v. Avant, 80 Ga., 195; Schiff v. Railway, 52 How. Pr., 91; Transportation Co. v. Bloch Bros., 86 Tenn., 424; Railway v. Frankenberg, 54 Ill., 88; Burroughs v. Railway, 100 Mass., 26; Express Co. v. Rush, 24 Ind., 403; Railway v. Montford, 60 Ill., 175; Railway v. Wilcox, 84 Ill., 239; Forbes v. Railway, 7 Rich., 698; Aldridge v. Railway, 15 C. B. (N. S.), 582. Authorities upon this point might be multiplied. Even the case of Muschamp v. Railway (8 M. & W.), does not assert a different rule.

In England, and in some of the States of the Union, the mere receipt of goods to be carried to a destination beyond the line of the carrier who first receives them is held to evidence a contract to transport to such destination, while in others such receipt is not held to evidence a contract to convey beyond that carrier’s line; but in the jurisdiction in which these diverse rulings are made there is a general concurrence of opinion in the proposition that the carrier may by special contract exempt itself from liability for an injury to freight resulting after it has gone into the hands of another carrier, to be transported to destination.

The ground of concurrence is contract, which in some jurisdictions it is held is necessary to relieve from liability for the act of a connecting carrier over whose line the freight must or does pass to its destination; while in the other it is held, that in the absence of special contract no such liability rests on the receiving carrier for injuries occurring after he has safely passed the freight to a connecting carrier.

There are, however, a few cases in which it has been held, that a carrier under such a contract as that involved in this case is liable for an injury to freight after it has passed into the hands of a connecting-carrier uninjured; and among these are found some decisions by the Court of Appeals of this State, with which we regret to differ.

In Railway v. Vaughn, 16 Southwestern Reporter, 775, the liability of a carrier was asserted, although the shipping contract was substantially the same as that involved in this case, and two cases are invoked as authority for the ruling in that case. One of these is the case of Railway v. Allison, decided by this court, 59 Texas, 193. In that case the plaintiff shipped from Galveston, Texas, to Chicago, Illinois, five cars of melons in cars adapted to their preservation and safe carriage, under an agreement that the melons should be transported in those cars *355 without change to Chicago. The evidence tended to show, that a connecting carrier to whom the cars were delivered placed the melons in other cars less adapted to their safe transportation, and that from this injury resulted. The shipping contract provided, that the railway company should not be liable for injury resulting from some causes enumerated, and that the company should not “be liable for any damage, loss, or injury occurring not on its own railway.”

In disposing of the case it was said, that the averments of the petition were to the effect that there was an agreement that the melons should be carried to their destination in the cars in which they were first placed. There is a general expression in the opinion, that a carrier undertaking to carry freight to a destination beyond his own line can not contract that his responsibility shall terminate at the end of his own line; but to ascertain what a court actually does decide the facts on which the opinion is based must be considered, and no one paragraph in an opinion ought to be considered alone in arriving at the intention of the court. What this court did decide and intend to hold is so clearly expressed in the opinion in the case that we can but feel that had the whole opinion been read it ought not to have been understood to lay down any such rule as that it is cited to sustain.

It is said: “The exemption from liability is, however, available only when the carrier forwards the goods consigned to him in the manner and by the route with reference to which the contract is made. If he deviates from his route or forwards the goods by a different conveyance from those contemplated by his agreement, he becomes an insurer of the goods, and can not avail himself of any exception made in his 'behalf in the contract. Fatman v. Railway, 2 Disney, 248; Robinson v. Transportation Co., 45 Iowa, 470.

“The contract to forward the melons in this case through from Galveston to Chicago on the cars on which they were loaded was an entirety.

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Bluebook (online)
16 L.R.A. 39, 19 S.W. 547, 84 Tex. 352, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarn-v-international-great-northern-railway-co-tex-1892.