Payne v. White House Lumber Co.

231 S.W. 417, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 400
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 1921
DocketNo. 1750.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 417 (Payne v. White House Lumber 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
Payne v. White House Lumber Co., 231 S.W. 417, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 400 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

The appellee lumber company, a corporation, originally filed its petition in the district court, December 2, 1919, against Walker D. Hines, Director General of the United States Railroad Administration, and Panhandle Santa Fé Railway Company. It sued for damages for alleged shortage between weights at point of shipment and weights at destination of a number of cars of coal shipped from points in Colorado to its offices at White Deer, Pampa, Miami, and Canadian, Tex.; the total shortage alleged to be 21 tons, made up of several thousand pounds shortage on each of the cars named, and alleged to have been the market value of $10 per ton, or a total of $210. All of said shipments occurred during the year 1918. Also it is alleged and claimed the right to a refund of various demurrage charges paid under protest during the year 1918 on a number of different shipments of coal and lumber at destination, Canadian, Tex., alleging that the cars of said shipment were delayed in transit and delivered in such numbers as to exceed the consignee's daily rate of shipment, and also that they exceeded appellee's facilities for unloading within the free time, but for which the demurrage would not have occurred. The total amount of damage claimed was $643.25, with legal interest on same from date of collection.

It is also sought to recover for an overcharge for freight on a car of lumber from Calcasieu, La., to White Deer, Tex., in the *Page 419 sum of $185.22 and legal interest from date of payment of the overcharge. The latter shipment was made during December, 1917, and arrived during January, 1918. Walker D. Hines filed a plea in abatement, based, first, upon the ground that as to the claim for demurrage and overcharge of freight such matters were fixed by rules of the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States, and that such Commission has jurisdiction to determine the correctness thereof, and that the district court of Hemphill county did not have jurisdiction of the suit to recover the same, in the absence of a showing in plaintiff's petition that any application had been made to the Interstate Commerce Commission for relief, and further that the matter complained of in the suit occurred while the Panhandle Santa Fé Railway Company was under the control of the United States Railway Administration, and that at the time of filing the plea, Auggust 18, 1920, such administration was represented by John Barton Payne, Walker D. Hines having been dismissed, and that John Barton Payne should be made a party to the suit, for which reason he asked that the case be continued.

Such plea of abatement having been overruled and exceptions noted, defendant Hines then filed his original answer, in which he excepted to the plaintiff's petition on various grounds and pleaded that the Panhandle Santa Fé Railway Company was not responsible; that the Interstate Commerce Commission had jurisdiction over the claim for freight and demurrage and that the claim should have been first presented to such Commission; that the cars being in a group arose from the act of God in the nature of an unprecedented washout of the track which caused the cars to accumulate at points without any negligence on the part of defendant; that the coal was shipped in open cars, such as would naturally permit some of it to escape therefrom; that such shipments were for the convenience of the public to save money in loading and unloading, and that the Regional Director had made a ruling that the administration would not pay for loss and damage when so shipped except in certain instances arising from fire, theft, etc. He also pleaded misjoinder of causes of action in that the freight, demurrage, and shortage of coal would require three entirely different adjudications; also, that the shortage would be due to natural causes, such as shrinkage en route. The plaintiff below, appellee here, by supplemental petition, pleaded that since the institution of this suit the President of the United States has appointed John Barton Payne as representative of all railroads under government control, to succeed Walker D. Hines, the appointment being in virtue of an act of Congress, which provided specifically that at the time of such appointment, and by reason thereof, no pending suit should abate against any carrier originally under government control, and that it then made substitution of Payne in the place of Hines, in accordance with the provision of the act, and prays for judgment in accordance with the original petition. The court substituted Payne by an order entered of record at the same term at which such supplemental petition was filed. No citation or notice to Payne was issued, and defendant Hines excepted to the action of the court. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and the court rendered judgment against John Barton Payne as Federal Agent, for $974.59, with interest thereon from September 1, 1920. John Barton Payne filed a motion for new trial and an appeal bond and brings this case before this court for review.

The first, second, and third assignments of error relate to the action of the court in rendering judgment against John Barton Payne as Agent of the Railroad Administration, for the reason that he had no notice and could not be substituted as a matter of law without being cited, or having notice served upon him, and that the court erred in overruling defendant's motion that the cause be continued for the purpose of citing appellant. The record shows in this case that John Barton Payne, Agent, was substituted for Hines by the supplemental petition and order of court before entering upon the trial of the case. Hines and the railroad appear to have been dismissed by the action of the appellee in filing its supplemental petition. The same attorneys that represented Hines and the railway company represented Payne in his motion for new trial and on his appeal in this case. The case seems to have been fully developed in the trial court on the facts, and counsel representing Payne at that time or at this time show that they represented defendant in the trial court, making objections and taking bills of exception to the action of the court in its various rulings, however, signing it as attorney for Hines and the railway company, except in the motion for new trial. There is a bill of exception in the record taken by the attorneys for Hines, reciting the various facts above set out with reference to the substitution of Payne for Hines, without citation or notice, and stating that the attorneys did not appear for Payne but for Hines. However, the trial court qualifies the bill by stating that if counsel for appellant stated that they were not appearing for Payne in the trial, he did not hear it, and the judgment recites that —

"Both plaintiff and defendant appeared by attorneys, announced ready for trial, and a jury being waived, all matters of fact as well as of law were submitted to the court. The court having heard the pleading read, the evidence offered, the argument of counsel, and being *Page 420 advised as to the law, here renders judgment and decrees in said cause."

To reverse this case upon the assignments made would be upon a bald technicality. This court, in the case of Hines v. Collins, 227 S.W. 332, rather expressed the opinion that in the substitution of the Agent of the Government, under the Transportation Act of 1920 (41 Stat. 456), service upon him might be required. However, the case was not reversed upon that ground, but upon others; but we were then of the opinion that possibly under our practice such notice or service would be required. There seems to be a diversity of opinion among the courts, as to the meaning of that act, or, in other words, the method by which the agent should be made a party.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 417, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-white-house-lumber-co-texapp-1921.