Pine Bluff Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Andrews

20 S.W.2d 633, 180 Ark. 106, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 242
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 14, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 633 (Pine Bluff Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pine Bluff Compress & Warehouse Co. v. Andrews, 20 S.W.2d 633, 180 Ark. 106, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 242 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

'Smith, J.

Appellant company is engaged in the business of compressing and storing cotton for hire a,h its compress and warehouse in the eastern portion of the city of Pine Bluff, and in the month of April, 1927, appellee had several hundred bales of cotton stored in one of the warehouses. The plamt was in two parts, each having a capacity of about twenty thousand bales of unpressed cotton. One of these, known as the upper warehouse, was designed for the reception of cotton shipped over railroads, and its floors were on a higher level than those of the other, which was known as the lower warehouse. Each plant consisted of several different sheds, having separate numbers. There were about eight thousand bales of cotton in the lower warehouse, and something less than that number in the upper.

In April of the year mentioned there began what later proved to be the most disastrous flood known in that section, and on April 13 flood warnings were sent out by the United States Weather Bureau. The Federal Government maintains at Little Bock a weather bureau, in charge of H. S. Cole, who has general supervision of the meteorological, climatological and river work in the State of Arkansas, where records are made and kept of the rainfall, and the rise and fall of the rivers, and other related subjects. There is a substation at Pine Bluff and at other places in the State, which make daily reports to the Little Bock office, and receive daily reports from it. A Miss Scheu was in charge of the Pine Bluff office. The reports to which we have referred were made by wire, or were made in that manner during the time herein referred to, and were so made for the obvious purpose of communicating the information without delay.

Gn April 13, 1927, at 10 a. m., flood warnings for the Arkansas River, on which Pine Bluff is situated, were telegraphed to Miss Scheu for dissemination in the territory served by that office. This warning meant simply that the crest of the river would exceed the flood stage, which was defined to be the flood level, at which the river left its banks, and began to do some damage. It' is an annual event for the river to exceed its flood stage, which of itself causes no apprehension, as most of the territory subject to this damage had what was supposed to be protection by levees. Other .territory was supposed to be above the reach of the floods, and such was the land upon which appellant’s warehouses were located. No overflow had ever reached them prior to 1927. These flood warnings were renewed during the succeeding days, and accompanying them were reports on the stage of the river at points higher up than Pine Bluff, which excited general alarm, but the managing officers of appellant company thought the elevation of the ground upon which their plant was located was such that a sufficient margin of safety was assured. Prior to 1927 the highest flood stage of the river at Pine Bluff had been 29.6 feet, but on the 21st of April a stage of 32.4 feet was reached. A stage of 31 feet was reached on Monday, April 18, and this flood level was high enough to put water in the lower warehouse, and the cotton which had not been removed from it prior to that time was damaged on that account. Appellee had 137 bales of cotton in this warehouse, which was damaged, and this suit was brought to recover damages to compénsate this loss. A judgment was recovered, from which is this appeal. No question is made as to the amount of the recovery if there is liability, but it is very earnestly insisted that appellant is not liable at all, for the reason that the loss was occasioned by an act of God, which could not have been averted by ordinary care and diligence on appellant’s part.

Prom what we have said it is apparent that the flood did not come suddenly and unexpectedly, as in the case of a break of a levee which was thought to be secure. There were repeated warnings, and the question of fact in the case is whether, after such warnings were given as must have apprised appellant that its warehouse was in danger, proper diligence was thereafter used to remove the cotton to the upper warehouse, a place of safety.

The court gaye elaborate instructions defining the duty of the appellant under the circumstances, which are conceded to be substantially correct, and which we find to be so, although it is claimed that one of these instructions should have been modified in the manner hereafter discussed, and that another instruction, numbered 4, should not have been given, because it left out of consideration the question of time in which to remove the cotton after knowing it was in danger. It is also insisted that error was committed in refusing* to exclude certain parts of a deposition taken in appellee’s 'behalf. These assignments of error will be considered in the order stated.

In regard to the assignment of error that the testimony does not show any negligence on the part of appellant, the following facts may be stated in addition to those already recited:

Miss Scheu testified that upon receipt of the reports from Little Rock she furnished copies thereof to the daily papers in Pine Bluff, which published them, and that these reports excited the widest interest, and her telephone rang continuously for three days, and she was kept busy answering inquiries concerning the river. It is not contended that appellant was unaware of the situation; oax the contrary, it is stipulated that the officials of the company kept up with the stage of the river every day from the 11th of April to the 21st, inclusive. The insistence is that it was not until Friday, the 15th, that these reports became sufficiently ominous to suggest that such an unprecedented stage would be reached as would put water in the lower warehouse; and it is further insisted that, when this report was received, appellant exercised the greatest diligence to remove the cotton to the upper warehouse.

Appellee testified that on April 11 he discussed the river reports with Mr. Roane, the secretary of the appellant company, and advised him that if the river reached the stage at Pine Bluff which the reports from points higher up the river indicated it would do, the cotton in the lower warehouse would be flooded, and that Mr. Roane replied that he would notify Mr. Grant, the superintendent in charge of the plant. Mr. Roane denied that this conversation occurred.

The testimony is to the effect that the predictions of the weather bureau were not always verified, but that they were generally approximately correct; sometimes the predicted stages were exceeded, while in other years they were not. The factor entering into this equation was the continuance or cessation of rainfall; but a rainfall of 4.2 inches at Pine Bluff on April 15 gave no promise that the predictions would not be verified as to the maximum stages. The rise at Pine Bluff from the 12th to the 21st was rapid and constant, and on the 15th the river went above the flood stage at Pine Bluff, which is 25 feet.

Hale, a civil engineer, testified on behalf of appellant. This witness was familiar with the surface levels at the warehouses, and of the flood levels of the river.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 633, 180 Ark. 106, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pine-bluff-compress-warehouse-co-v-andrews-ark-1929.