Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Harris

2 S.W. 574, 67 Tex. 166, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 631
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1886
DocketNo. 5033
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 2 S.W. 574 (Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Harris) 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
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Harris, 2 S.W. 574, 67 Tex. 166, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 631 (Tex. 1886).

Opinion

Station, Associate Justice.

This action was brought by the appellee to recover damages for injury claimed to have been received by the failure of the appellant, within a reasonable time, to transport two hundred and eighty-five head of beeves from Temple, Texas, to Chicago, Illinois, and to recover the value of one beef claimed to have been lost through the appellant’s negligence.

It is claimed that the beeves were deteriorated in value by the long time in which they were in course of transportation. The appellant alleged that in. consideration that it would transport the beeves at a reduced price, the appellee, by special contract, agreed to assume all risks of damage the cattle might sustain by reason of any delay in transportation, unless such damage resulted from the willful negligence of its agents. The appellant further pleaded that it was agreed by special contract “that as [169]*169a condition precedent to plaintiff’s rights to recover damage for any loss or injury to said cattle, he should give notice in writing of his claim therefor, to the said officers of defendant, or its nearest station agent, before said cattle were removed from their said place of destination above mentioned, and before they were mingled with other stock.”

These special contracts covering all the beeves were made exhibits to the answer. These contracts were elaborately drawn, and in terms released the appellant from liability for losses resulting from many things, for which a common carrier would ordinarily be liable, but as no claim for damages is based on the violation of duty by the carrier in any other respect than as above stated, it will not be necessary to consider them.

The appellee filed demurrers to so much of the answer as set up the special contracts, and these demurrers were sustained.

It is claimed that this was error. It was at one time held that carriers of animals did not incur the responsibilities of common carriers; that they were private carriers, and subject only to such responsibility as the law imposed upon such bailees, or as the contract of the parties fixed. This holding, however, has long since ceased to be held correct, and it is now held that the carriers of such property are common carriers, ¡..abject to the samé responsibilities as carriers of other classes of property, except as this is modified by the inherent character of such property.

By the Constitution of this State railroads are declared to be common carriers (Const., art. 10, sec. 2), and it is common knowledge that a large part of the business of those corporations in this State is the transportation of animals. The appellant must be held to have received the beeves for transportation as a common carrier; and in so far as it sought to shield itself from responsibility for an unnecessary delay in their transportation, through a special contract which sought to limit its liability to such injury as resulted from the “willful negligence” of its agents, its effort must be held unavailing. By “willful negligence,” was evidently meant some gross omission of duty, involving intentional or willful misconduct. The common, carrier can not, by contract, relieve itself from liability for an injury resulting from the negligence of itself or servants, though the negligence be of a degree less than was intended by the term used.

[170]*170The provision in the contract requiring notice of a claim for damages is as follows:

“Said party of the second part further agrees that as a condition precedent to his right to recover any damages for any loss- or injury to said stock, he will give notice in writing of his claim therefor to some officer of Said party of the first part, or its-nearest station agent, before such stock is removed from the place of destination above mentioned, or from the place of the. delivery of the same to the party of the second part, and before-such stock is mingled with other stock.” There are many cases, holding that a common carrier may, by contract, limit the time within which claim for loss must be made.

In Express Company v. Caldwell (21 Wall., 264) it was held that an agreement that an express company should not be liable for the loss of a package unless claim was made within ninety days after the package was delivered to the carrier, it requiring-but a single day to transport the package to the place for delivery, was valid.

The same ruling was made in the case of Westcott v. Fargo (61 N. Y., 542), and in the case of Express Company v. Harris, (51 Ind., 127). In Express Company v. Caldwell, such an agreement was held to operate as a limitation on the carrier’s common liability, and as the limitation was deemed reasonable, it was. sustained. The same view seems to have been taken in Express Company v. Harris, but in Westcott v. Fargo the agreement-was treated as in the nature of a statute of limitation, and it. was denied that the giving of the required notice was a condition precedent to right of action.

In Express Company v. Reagan (29 Indiana, 21), such a contract was, in effect, held to be a limitation on the carrier’s common law obligation, unreasonable and void.

In Express Company v. Caperton (44 Ala., 103), such an agreement seems to have been treated as in the nature of a statute of limitation, and it was said that the carrier “can not be allowed to make a statute of limitation so short as to be capable of becoming a means of fraud.”

In the cases of Goggin v. Railway Company, 12 Kansas, 416, and Rice v. Railway Company, 63 Missouri, 314, it seems to have-been held that a contract such as that set up by the defendant in this case is valid; We have not access to either of the volumes, in which these cases are reported, and do not know what the facts were.

[171]*171In the case before us there can be no doubt that it was the intention of the carrier to limit its common law liability, for the contracts assert that as a condition precedent to the shipper’s right to recover damages for an injury done to his property, while in the hands of the carrier, the shipper shall give notice of his claim before the animals are removed from the place of destination or from the place of delivery.

Such a contract would seem necessarily to operate as a limitation on the carrier’s common law liability, for under the rules furnished by that system of laws for the determination of the liability of a common carrier to a shipper for an injury done to the property of the latter while in course of transportation, a cause of action arises at once upon the infliction of the injury, and the requirement of an additional fact before a cause of action exists, and may be enforced, restricts or limits the right which the shipper would have at common law. In the absence of the special contract relied upon, when an unnecessary delay occurred and injury resulted therefrom, the shipper’s cause of action was complete, and to require notice, as does the special contract, as a condition precedent to the accruing of the cause of action, is but to say that the contract limits the liability of the carrier, in that it makes its liability depend on the existence of a fact not necessary to fix liability at common law.

Although the rule that a common carrier may limit its liability by contract, when the limitation is one reasonable in character, may have had its origin in England in a statute, it has become very general in the States of this Union in which there is not some statutory regulation forbidding it.

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2 S.W. 574, 67 Tex. 166, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-railway-co-v-harris-tex-1886.