Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. Texas v. Hailey

156 S.W. 1119, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 156 S.W. 1119 (Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. Texas v. Hailey) 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. Texas v. Hailey, 156 S.W. 1119, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 30 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

In this case appellee sued appellant, alleging that he purchased from the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company, at its office in Oklahoma City, Okla., a railroad ticket entitling him to transportation for himself and his baggage from that point to Dallas, Tex., and that appellant, Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company of Texas, is a connecting line of said initial carrier and as such received said baggage from the initial line and failed to deliver same to appellee. The baggage was alleged to consist of a trunk and its contents of the value of $607.35. Judgment for said amount was prayed, etc. Appellant, as applicable to the issues involved in this appeal, by its answer averred that appellee for a fare paid became a passenger at said Oklahoma City upon a connecting line, his destination being Dallas, Tex., but that under the baggage rules and regulations then in force concerning the carriage of passengers and their baggage between said points approved and promulgated by the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States, and posted in the depot at Oklahoma City in compliance with the orders of said Commission and of which appellee had notice, it was provided, among other things, that, "Unless a greater sum is declared by the passenger and charges paid for increased valuation at time of delivery to carrier, the value of baggage belonging to or checked for an adult passenger shall be deemed and agreed to be not in excess of one hundred dollars, and value of the baggage belonging to or checked for a child traveling on a half ticket shall be deemed and agreed to be not in excess of fifty dollars ($50.00). If passenger, at the time of checking baggage, declares, according to the form prescribed, a greater value than one hundred dollars ($100.00) for an adult and fifty dollars ($50.00) for a child, each one hundred dollars ($100.00) in value, or fraction thereof, above such allowance will be charged for at ten (10) per cent. of the excess baggage rate per hundred (100) pounds, for the distance carried. The minimum rate will be ten (10) cents per hundred dollars ($100.00) and the mimimum charge for increased valuation twenty-five cents (25 cents)." After pleading the quoted rules and regulations, appellant further averred that appellee did not in compliance with said rules make the declaration that his baggage was of a value greater than that adopted as a basis of valuation, nor pay the charges for such increased valuation, and that in the absence of an express declaration to that effect appellee could not recover more than $100. Appellant also pleaded its receipt of the trunk from the connecting carrier, and subsequent delivery to appellee. In reply to the foregoing answer appellee specially demurred to that portion of the same which set out said baggage rules and regulations, because immaterial, irrelevant, and constituting no defense to appellee's cause of action. The demurrer was sustained and said portion of the answer stricken from the record. Upon trial before the jury appellee recovered $400, judgment was entered accordingly, and from which this appeal is perfected.

The evidence upon the trial and the finding of the jury therefrom warrant the following conclusions of fact: Appellee purchased a ticket in Oklahoma City, Okla., from that point to Dallas, Tex., from the agent of the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company, a connecting line of the appellant, Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company of Texas, and upon that ticket checked his trunk to Dallas, Tex. The check issued by the original carrier and which evidenced appellee's ownership of the trunk had indorsed thereon: "This duplicate check is to be given the passenger who must present it for baggage immediately upon arrival at destination, to avoid charges for storage. Unless a greater sum is declared by the passenger and charge paid for increased valuation at time of delivery to carrier, the valuation of baggage checked hereon shall be deemed and agreed *Page 1121 to be not in excess of $100.00 for the whole ticket and $50.00 for a half ticket." The trunk was in fact delivered by the initial line to appellant and by appellant delivered to its officers at its station, in Dallas, Tex. Appellant's agents failed to deliver the trunk to appellee when demanded. The contents of the trunk consisted of the personal wearing apparel of appellee, except as hereinafter particularly mentioned.

Appellant first complains of the court's charge wherein the court instructed the jury that if appellee was entitled to recover at all the measure of his damages was such an amount as they should determine from the testimony to be the value of the trunk and its contents the day of its conversion or loss by appellant. Appellant contends the charge as given was erroneous for the reason that the true measure of damages in such cases is the market value of the trunk and its contents on the date of its conversion or loss. The measure of damages for injury or damage to household furniture, wearing apparel, etc., has been repeatedly stated by the appellate courts of this state to be the difference in the actual value of the same just prior to the damage or injury and the actual value thereof just subsequent thereto; and that the proper method of arriving at their value at the time of the injury or damage is to take into consideration the cost of the articles, the extent of their use, whether worn or out of date, and their condition at the time, etc. Wells Fargo Express Co. v. Williams, 71 S.W. 314; Railway Company v. Seale,28 Tex. Civ. App. 364, 67 S.W. 437; Benedict v. Railway Company, 91 S.W. 811; Railway Company v. Smythe, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 557,119 S.W. 892; Railway Company v. Nicholson, 61 Tex. 550; Railway Company v. Colquitt (Sup.) 9 S.W. 603; Barker v. Lewis, Storage Trans. Co., 78 Conn. 198, 61 A. 363, 3 Ann.Cas. 889, and note. And we think it clear that the measure of damages recoverable for similar articles in case of conversion, loss, or appropriation would be the actual value of the same at the time of such conversion, loss, or appropriation; such value to be arrived at in the manner we have just stated. While the charge of the court does not tell the jury that the actual value of the articles may be recovered, but in lieu thereof confines the jury to the value of the same, a term favorable perhaps to appellee, and while it omits to state the manner by which such value may be arrived at, appellant nevertheless makes no complaint on that score, nor did it request any amplification thereof by special charge, and, the charge being correct as far as it went, the assignment presents no error.

Neither would it have been correct, as urged by appellant, to have permitted its witness to testify that the articles had a market value as secondhand articles, and to prove such secondhand value, since to do so would have served the purpose of establishing a measure of recovery at variance with the settled rule in such cases. As said in Wells Fargo Express Co. v. Williams, supra: "Such a value would depend largely on considerations which would have nothing to do with the intrinsic value of the articles, or their actual worth to the owner."

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 1119, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-k-t-ry-co-texas-v-hailey-texapp-1913.