Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Beard

78 S.W. 253, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 188, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 512
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 253 (Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Beard) 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, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Beard, 78 S.W. 253, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 188, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 512 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by appellee against appellant for the value o.f ten bales of cotton, which the appellee in his petition alleged were burned and destroyed after the same had been delivered into the possession of the appellant as a common carrier, the cotton then being in its possession for shipment. Also that the fire which burned the cotton was caused and set out by the negligence of appellant. The court in its charge submitted to the jury both of the grounds alleged by the plaintiff.

The verdict of the jury in favor of the appellee, the plaintiff below, for the full amount of the cotton, is general; therefore it is impossible to determine whether it was predicated upon the liability of appellant as common carrier, or whether it is based upon alleged negligence in setting out the fire which destroyed the cotton.

*189 It is seriously contended by appellant that the evidence is not sufficient to authorize the verdict and the judgment of the trial court against the appellant on either of the grounds alleged in the plaintiffs petition. The evidence is somewhat meager upon both of the grounds relied upon, and is less satisfadtory .in tending to establish the liability of the appellant as a common carrier, than on the issue of negligently causing the fire that destroyed the cotton.

As to the latter ground of recovery, there is evidence to the effect that either upon the night that the cotton was destroyed or night before, sparks were discovered coming from one of the appellant’s locomotives near the cotton, and that the sparks were blowing in the direction of the cotton. The fire was' not discovered until about two or two and a half hours after the sparks were noticed coming from the engine and blowing in the direction of the cotton. The appellant made no effort to -establish the fact that its engines were properly operated and that they were equipped with the proper appliances to prevent the escape of sparks, but rested, it seems, its defense upon the proposition that the evidence of plaintiff upon this subject was insufficient to show that the fire which destroyed the cotton was set out by one of its engines.

While the testimony is not of the most satisfactory character, we are still of the opinion that it was of a nature that authorized the jury to conclude that the fire was set out by the engine that was discovered emitting the sparks. While it is true that about two or two and a half hours elapsed from the time that sparks were discovered coming from the engine, to the time of the discovery of the fire, still the conclusion is not unreasonable that the fire might have originated from the sparks that were discovered coming from the engine, and may have ignited or been burning the cotton or some combustible material near it some time before the fire was actually discovered. The witness who testified to seeing the sparks coming from the engine and blowing in the direction of the cotton is not certain whether he discovered the sparks on the night of the fire or the night before; but the evidence upon this subject, in our opinion, was of a character that authorized the jury to conclude that the cotton was set on fire by the sparks seen by this witness coming from'one of the appellant’s engines.

But, as said before, the evidence that the cotton was in the possession of the appellant as a common carrier at the time of its destruction by the fire in question, is less satisfactory than the evidence upon the issue just discussed.

The appellee, it seems, in the main relies more upon the custom or course of dealing upon the part .of the railway company and those handling cotton at Eddy (the place where it was destroyed) in order to establish delivery to the company as a common carrier, than upon any evidence tending to show a contract of delivery. At the request of appellee, the court submitted to the jury by a special charge the question of appellant’s liability arising from such custom or course of dealing. The evidence upon this subject, in our opinion, is not sufficient *190 to show that appellant, by reason of such course of dealing and custom, had received possession of the cotton for shipment as a common carrier at the time that the same was destroyed. And if upon another trial -the evidence upon this subject is not stronger than that stated in the record before us, then we are of the opinion that the issue ought not to be submitted to the jury. The evidence relating to this subject merely _ tends to show that the course of dealing and custom was to place on the platform where the cotton was destroyed, cotton to be shipped, and that it was the expectation and intention of such parties so placing the cotton there, and also of the railway company, that the same was placed there for shipment, and would ultimately be shipped when instructions were given to that effect, or when the parties were ready for the shipment to be made; but the evidence does not show that such storage and delivery of the cotton upon the platform was by virtue of a custom or course of dealing to be thereafter regarded as then in the actual possession of the railway company as a common carrier for shipment.

'On the question as to whether the cotton had been received by the appellant as a common carrier, independent of the custom and course of dealing referred to, the evidence is slight; but there is the testimony of the witness Fencemaker, the station agent of the appellant as follows : “To the best of my knowledge and belief, I had no arrangement with T. L. Warriner or any other party further than that the cotton was to be billed out as soon as placed on the platform.” The T. L. Warriner referred to by this witness is the party who placed the cotton destroyed upon the platform. FTo bill of lading was ever issued nor was one demanded, nor was it intended that this cotton should be shipped until the plaintiff had collected upon the platform a sufficient number of bales to load a car.

Other than as stated, the evidence does not show that the railway company was informed that the cotton was there for shipment, nor was any car demanded, nor had the owner determined definitely the place to which he intended to ship the cotton, nor the time of shipment. The testimony referred to of this witness, Fencemaker, has a tendency to show that the cotton was to be billed out as soon as placed on the platform ; and if this is true, such arrangement might be held as some evidence, although slight, tending to show delivery to the appellant of the cotton in question as a common carrier.

We do not mean to say that the evidence of this witness, considered alone, establishes the fact that the cotton in question was delivered to appellant as a common carrier, and that it received- it as such, but we merely intimate the opinion that it may be considered as a slight circumstance, in connection with other evidence, if any should be developed, as tending to show delivery to the carrier of the cotton in question. The force of this evidence is much weakened by the testimony of the witness Warriner, who placed the cotton upon the platform, and who was a witness in behalf of the plaintiff, to the effect that it was not expected to ship the cotton immediately, but that the same would be shipped as *191 soon as the witness Warriner, who bought the cotton in question, had purchased a carload. He states that he did not know when he would ship out the ten bales in question.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 253, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 188, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-kansas-texas-railway-co-v-beard-texapp-1904.