San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co. v. Barnett

66 S.W. 474, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 498, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 474 (San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co. v. Barnett) 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
San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co. v. Barnett, 66 S.W. 474, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 498, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

JAMBS, Chief Justice.

Appellee sued in the County Court for damages by reason of the failure of appellant and the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Be Railway Company to properly and safely transport a shipment of eight carloads of cattle from Karnes City, Texas, to San Angelo, Texas.

Plaintiff’s first amended original petition, upon which the ease went to trial, alleged substantially as follows: That on August 26, 1898, plaintiff delivered 408 head of cattle to defendant, San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Company, at Karnes City for transportation to San Angelo, and that its agent there contracted with plaintiff to receive and ship and transport same over its line to Cameron and over the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Be Railway Company lines from Cameron to San Angelo with reasonable care, speed, and diligence at a certain rate, to plaintiff as consignee. That defendants did not so carry and deliver the cattle, but that they negligently delayed the cars upon which the cattle were loaded at various places for many hours, which caused them great injury by reason of their being so confined in the cars and in muddy and insufficient pens and being so long without food and water; that defendants’ servants handled them so roughly in loading and unloading and in feeding and watering them, and in causing the ears to be jerked and thrown around against each other and other cars, that many of the cattle were thrown down and against each other and the cars and bruised and injured and lost in flesh and value. The petition charges that seven of them were killed in the cars by this treatment, of the aggregate value of $175, and sixteen head of the aggregate value of $400 were so injured that they died after being unloaded at San Angelo, *500 and that the balance were so injured that they thereby lost in flesh and value $1 per head, or $385. The prayer was for judgment against both defendants for the sum of $960 with 6 per cent interest per annum from August 28, 1898, or in case one of the defendadnts should be found not in fault, then against the other. Judgment was against appellant alone for $960, with interest as prayed for.

Appellant, the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Company, denied making any verbal contract with appellee, and alleged the execution of written contracts; that it was not the agent of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company, and that its sole undertaking was to deliver the cattle to the Gulf, Colorado & Santa, Fe Railway Company at Cameron, and that the latter received same as a connecting or succeeding carrier and not as the agent of this defendant. That it "was only liable for damages to said cattle on its own line by the terms of said contract; that this defendant safely and expeditiously transported the cattle to. Cameron, Texas, the end of its line, and immediately upon their arrival there delivered same in good order and condition. That no damage occurred to the cattle between Karnes City and Cameron,— and prayed for judgment as against the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company if any damages were adjudged against it.

The verdict and judgment were against appellant for damages as prayed for, and in favor of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company on its plea to the jurisdiction. There are no assignments of error which relate to the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company and in so far the judgment will be affirmed.

Plaintiff filed a supplemental petition admitting the signing of the written contract attached to the answer, but alleged the following facts as to their signing: After the cattle were loaded and delivered to defendant at Karnes City, defendant’s agent presented the contracts,, demanded that they be signed, and refused to move them unless they were signed, and because of these circumstances he signed them. That at Cameron the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company required him, and it became necessary for him, to sign contracts over its road from there to San Angelo. That there was no consideration whatever for the signing of the contracts, and they were signed under duress and compulsion. That if it should be held that the cattle were shipped under the written contracts and not under verbal contracts, then that the shipment was in fact a through shipment, as originally contracted between plaintiff and defendant’s agent at Karnes City,—that although the written contracts call for the delivery to him of his cattle at Cameron and although at Cameron new contracts were required to be signed, yet in truth and in fact said shipment was intended by plaintiff and was received and acted upon by both defendants as a through shipment over their respective lines at a stipulated rate of 2 cents per hundred pounds.

By supplemental answer appellant denied the making of any verbal *501 .contracts; that plaintiff knew that defendant’s agent at Karnes City had .no authority to make any but written contracts, etc.

First assignment of error: “The trial court erred in rendering any judgment whatever in this case, for the reason that said court had no jurisdiction over the subject matter, in this: That plaintiff in his petition seeks to and did in fact recover in this suit the sum of $960, with legal interest thereon from August 28, 1898, and therefore said suit and judgment rendered therein are for an amount which exceeds that over which the county court has jurisdiction.”

The first amended original petition was filed ¡November 27, 1899. The original petition is not in the record, and all we know of it is that it was filed January 26, 1899. The damages, if any, were sustained about August 28, 1898. At the time of filing the suit the amount sued for, say $960, with 6 per cent interest, could not have exceeded $1000. The cases of Schulz v. Tessman, 92 Texas, 488, and Baker v. Smelser, 88 Texas, 26, .have decided that in cases like this the interest, if allowed, is regarded as damages. Watkins v. Junker does not, as we understand it, announce any different rule. It has been held also that interest as damages may be allowed, although not asked in the petition. Railway v. Greathouse, 82 Texas, 105. In testing the jurisdiction of a court the distinction between interest as interest, and interest allowed as damages, may become material.

The suit was filed at a time when 6 per cent interest on $960 would not have amounted to $1000. Consequently the court had jurisdiction. We can not know from this record what was originally sued for, but presumably it was not for more than is asked in the amendment. The county court having once acquired jurisdiction, would continue to have it to the maximum extent of its jurisdiction. Any amended petition which increased the amount so as to claim more than $1000 in damages (including interest as damages) thereon, which this does, would be improper and inadmissible (1 White & Wilson, section 1032), but would not necessarily have the effect of defeating the court’s jurisdiction over the proper amount. Upon another trial plaintiff may amend his petition in this respect.

The twenty-third assignment is that the court should have given the following requested charge: “The plaintiff has failed to prove the contract alleged by him, and you are instructed to return a verdict for defendant.” There may have been sufficient evidence to show an oral contract with defendant’s agent to receive and transport the cattle to San Angelo; but written contracts were signed with reference to the cattle which were inconsistent with such oral contract.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 474, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 498, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-aransas-pass-railway-co-v-barnett-texapp-1901.