National Compress Co. v. Hamlin

264 S.W. 488, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 637
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1924
DocketNo. 9136.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 488 (National Compress Co. v. Hamlin) 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
National Compress Co. v. Hamlin, 264 S.W. 488, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 637 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

Appellant has duly perfected its appeal from a judgment awarding damages in favor of appellee in the sum of $1,935.96. This judgment is based upon the following facts:

Appellant is the owner of a cotton compress located in the city of Waxahachie and, in its operation, receives cotton in bale, both for immediate compressing and for storage and ultimate compressing. A short time previous to April 25, 1982, appellee delivered! to appellant 32 bales of cotton for storage and ultimate compressing, and, at approximately the same time, the M. T. Patrick estate delivered to appellant for storage and ultimate compressing 76 bales of eotton. As compensation for the storage, appellant charged ap-pellee and the M. T. Patrick estate the sum of 40 cents per hale for the first 15 days in whieh said eotton was in storage and 1 cent additional each day per bale thereafter as long as said eotton was held by appellant in storage. These fees were paid both by ap-pellee and the M. T. Patrick estate. At the time appellant received this cotton, it caused same to he weighed and tagged and placed on its compress platform.

Appellant’s compress was constructed in the year 1895 and consisted of the usual buildings, sheds,'and platforms used in the conduct of such business. This construction was near the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway tracks and near Waxahachie creek, being some 40 or 50 yards from the hank of said hreek. Waxahachie creek was a stream that ran through the southern portion of the city of Waxahachie and was subject to frequent overflow. At the time of the construction of this compress, the highest known point which the overflow waters of said, creek had attained had occurred during the year 1887. Appellant constructed its platform on a level with this high-water mark. The Missouri, Kansas & Texas depot in the city of Waxahachie was built also in the lowlands of this creek, and its floors were placed on the level of this high-water mark of 1887; its construction being previous to the compress construction. Some distance from where this compress was built, a branch, also subject to overflow, emptied its waters into Waxahachie creek; the compress being constructed in the fork of said branch and Waxahachie creek. The cotton in question was stored on a platform with very large openings and in no way safeguarded to hold cotton within the bounds of the platform in case of an overflow that would be sufficient to wash the cotton away. On the morning of April 25, 1922, Waxahachie creek overflowed its banks and its flood waters inundated the cotton platform and the force of the flood waters washed the said cotton bales from off the platform and damaged the cotton in the amount given in the judgment. The high-water mark reached on the morning of the 25th was approximately 30 inches higher than the mark reached by the overflow of 1887. There had been, just previous to this overflow, very heavy rains, both above and below the city of Waxahachie along said creek, so that the ground was thoroughly soaked with water and incapable of absorbing any of the rain that fell on the evening of the 24th and the morning of the '25th of *489 April. The rain 'was not in the ¡feral of a" “cloud-burst',” -1101 was a very hand downpour, and Waxahaehie creek began to 'overflow its ¡banks -at approximately -5 ¡a. w. -of said day, ¡and ¡the flood rose xapisiliLy, reaching its-orest at¡ approximately 7 .a. m. While Wax-ahaehie ¡.creek was the -subject '®f frequent 'Overflows, only at one ¡©ther ¡time--since the emecfion-da: the compress ¡platform had its flood -waters ■ subjected the said platform to overflow. This was in the .year ISIS, about four years, previous to the flood in-question. Some'damage was done to cotton «n '.¡the platform at that'time.

Appellant denied responsibility 'for the dana-a-ge suffered by appellee, -and "this suit resulted, -appellee having -subsequent -to the flood, -and-previous to the 'filing of'the suit, purchased from the M. T„ ¡Patrick -estate the claim for-'damages to the cotton'belonging to said estate.

Appellee based his rights ¡to -recover on the theory, ns -reflected by his petition, that, at the fene-appellant accepted-a-nd received the said cotton tffor storage, it -placed • same for such -storage upon its platform, .-sheds, and compress buildings, which 'it knew'were unsafe, osnsiiitahle, and dangenous for-the storage 'off -cotton for the reason that -the said shed-s ¡and -floor of the compress 'biiilding were ; too low -and -subject to overflow from the - waters -of Waxahaehie creek during 'freshets; 'further, that cm constructing said -compress •building, -jflatferms, and sheds, it left large openings ior -doorways in the walls .of said building, iwiithout doors or other means of closing -same -and without any means ito prevent the water from washing cotton ¡off and •out of saSil¡building during such freshets, .and that such construction and such want -of -protection was negligence on the part of .-appellant

It was íarüher ralleged that if «aid .e®m-;press building had been constructed with -floors, platforms, .and sheds three feet higher than they ware constructed, the same ¡would have been & .safe and suitable place for the storage of cotton ¡and free from damage from flood waters of said Waxahaehie creek; and, further, that appellant was guilty of negligence in such construction, in that it failed to place doors or other means of inelosure in the .open ways of said compress building, and failed to construct retaining walls and other means of protection around said buildings, Sheds and platforms, which would have protected appellee’s cotton from said flood waters.

Appellee also alleged the long, continued rains that caused Waxahaehie creek to overflow its banks and inundate ■ the said platforms and floors of the compress building on April 25, 1&22, and wash away the said cotton and thereby cause the damages appellee claimed in this suit.

Appellant answered by general denial and a special plea that it had exercised due care in the location of its compress and in building its platform above the high-water mark of Waxahaehie creek; that if it were negligent in so constructing and locating its platform, as alleged by appellee, that appellee and the representative.of the M. T. Patrick estate were duly informed of the location and height of the platform and of the overflows of Waxahaehie creek at the time the said cotton was placed on its platform, and that appellee and the said representative of the Patrick estate wore thereby guilty of contributory negligence that either caused or contributed to cause the damage suffered; and the further special plea that the damage to the said cotton was the direct result of an unprecedented flood, which could not have been reasonably expected or anticipated or provided against, and was therefore the act of God.

The case was tried to a jury and submitted on a general charge and a general verdict rendered in favor of appellee for the amount of the judgment. The court’s charge was carefully prepared and submitted the issue of negligence raised by appellee’s pleadings and the evidence, and also the defensive issue of contributory negligence and the issue as to whether the overflow of Waxa-haehie creek was so extraordinary and unprecedented that its extent and resulting effect could, not have been reasonably expected or anticipated and provided against by the exercise of ordinary care of prudent persons in appellant’s situation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 488, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-compress-co-v-hamlin-texapp-1924.