Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. A. E. Want & Co.

179 S.W. 903, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 984
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1915
DocketNo. 8234.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 903 (Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. A. E. Want & 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
Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. A. E. Want & Co., 179 S.W. 903, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 984 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

From a judgment in the sum of $155.87 in favor of plaintiff, A. E. Want & Co., the defendant railway company appeals.

Plaintiff sued defendant, alleging: That during the month of January, 1912, there was consigned to plaintiff at Ft. Worth, Tex., by D. E. Ryan Company of Minneapolis, Minn., a certain car of potatoes. That upon its arrival plaintiff became aware that the potatoes therein, or a portion thereof, were frozen and unmarketable, and refused to accept the shipment. That, in order to save the defendant the trouble and expense of handling said damaged potatoes, the defendant and its agents agreed with plaintiff that, if it would receive said shipment, the defendant company would pay all loss and damage on account of the condition of the potatoes, and directed the plaintiff to unload and assort the same, and promised when this was done, and the extent of the loss ascertained, the defendant company would pay to plaintiff the amount thereof. That said shipment was made with bill of lading attached, all of which was known to defendant and its agents, and that the contract contemplated that plaintiff should pay the attached draft and receive the potatoes, and that it was induced to so accept and pay for said shipment by the promises made by defendant. It was alleged that the loss amounted to. $155.87.

Defendant denied: (1) That any such promise was made by it as claimed by plaintiff ; (2) that if it was made, the agent who made it had authority to bind the defendant, or (3) that the defendant had held out such agent as having such authority; (4) that though the promise was made, and though the agent had the authority to make it, or had been held out by defendant as having such authority, yet the promise and agreement was in violation of the federal statutes of February 19, 1903, and amended in 1906, prohibiting concessions, rebates, and discrim-inations as to freight rates and charges on interstate shipments, and therefore was not enforceable.

The evidence showed: That, upon the arrival of the shipment at Ft. Worth, the car was placed on plaintiff’s house track, and that F. A. Jackson, agent and receiving clerk and warehouse foreman for plaintiff, looked at the potatoes and discovered their frosted and damaged condition, and called up the defendant’s local freight office, and, asking for the claim clerk, reported the matter to him, and requested that some one from defendant’s office come down and examine the- potatoes, and advise plaintiff what should be done. That W. N. Baker, defendant’s claim clerk or investigator under G. D. Rowe, local agent, in response to Mr. Jackson’s request came to where the car was and saw the potatoes, and instructed Jackson “to go ahead and run this car of potatoes and let him know what the damage was, and he would protect us (plaintiff) on it.” It was shown that Baker told Jackson “to handle the potatoes for the account of the M. K. & T. of Texas.” Baker testified that he instructed Jackson to go ahead and handle the potatoes on account of the defendant, but that he did not promise that the railway company would pay for any loss sustained, but merely that “we would give it prompt handling and it would be handled and settled on its merits.”

The evidence showed that both Rowe and Baker had many times prior thereto made settlements for damages claimed to shipments, without referring the claims to headquarters at Dallas; but both Messrs. Rowe and Baker testified that such a course was permitted under the rules of the defendant company only when the amount of the claim was less than $100; that larger claims had to be referred to the Dallas office. In this instance, the evidence shows that the claim was referred to the Dallas office by Baker, but for some unexplained reason was not paid, though nearly three years had elapsed between the origin of the claim and the judgment in the trial court.

The first assignment is directed to the failure of the trial court to give defendant’s special requested peremptory instruction, which appellant urges was error, for the following reasons set forth in its statement under said assignment:

“The uncontradieted evidence, and the weight of the evidence in the case, showing that contracts such as the one alleged by the plaintiff were not made by the various railroads in the city of Ft. Worth at that time, and further showing that there was no general custom or practice on the part of the railway companies in Ft. Worth, in existence at the time, whereby they would make such contracts or extend such privileges to shippers in Ft. Worth, or to parties to he notified of the arrival of shipments in the city of Ft. Worth, as was alleged by the plaintiff in its petition, and these facts being true, the alleged contract upon which plaintiff bases its suit was and is wholly discriminatory and conferred a privilege upon the said A. E. Want & Co. which was not conferred upon other shippers and parties to be notified of the arrival of shipments in the city of Ft. Worth, and was therefore unlawful, invalid, and not binding upon this defendant.
“The plaintiff having sued upon a breach of the alleged contract, and nowhere in its petition alleging that the said railway company was guilty of negligence in the handling of said shipment, but wholly relied upon the breach of said contract as alleged, the defendant, under the evidence and the facts adduced during the trial of the case, is clearly entitled to a peremptory instruction and the submission to the jury of its said special charge, No. 1.”

*905 [t ] We do not think the agreement by' Baker, acting for defendant company, to pay for the damaged potatoes, can reasonably be construed as being in the nature of a contract discriminating in favor of the plaintiff with reference to freight rates or charges. It was an acknowledgment of liability, the extent of which was to be determined by an examination of the potatoes, and sorting the damaged ones from the uninjured. The fact that this proof of the amount- of the damages was to be made by plaintiff’s agents and employés would not alter the character of said agreement or transaction. The separation of the good from the bad, and the ascertainment of the extent of the loss, was to be made “on the account of” defendant company, as testified to by Baker himself, and through the medium of his own selection. There is no pleading or proof to support the conclusion that the loss really suffered by plaintiff was not in the amount of the claim, or that the confidence Baker showed in the fairness and carefulness of plaintiff’s employés was misplaced. The plaintiff pleaded an agreement of compromise and settlement, and we think the evidence amply sustains such plea. We do not think the arguments urged to the effect, or the cited authorities holding, that where a contract between shipper and carrier contains a provision that grants to the shipper a special privilege or advantage, are in point. Therefore, we overrule the first assignment, and likewise the second, which complains of the failure of the trial court to enter judgment for defendant company.

[2] We do not think the court erred in refusing to admit the letter written by Baker, for Rowe, March 7, 1912, to the Dallas office, with reference to this claim, and we hold that the objection of plaintiff to its introduction that it was res inter alios acta, irrelevant, and immaterial, was properly sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 903, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-k-t-ry-co-of-texas-v-a-e-want-co-texapp-1915.