Schaff v. Kennedy
This text of 220 S.W. 223 (Schaff v. Kennedy) 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.
Opinion
The tariff sheets named but a single concentration point for cotton shipped between the points of origin and destination named in this suit. The court found that—
“No rate is provided or fixed by said tariffs for such cotton so originating and destined, with transit privileges at any other point except Wichita Falls, unless provided for by the rules and conditions shown in paragraph 9 hereof, copied from the tariffs.”
Paragraph 9 is thereupon set out, but as a. whole it is somewhat confusing, and we will not undertake here to set out the paragraph ad literatum. We think it will be sufficient .to say that so far as we can understand it it provides in effect that the rates as specified in the tariff sheets must, in all instances, be charged, and that shipments originating, as the one'in question did originate, must, as a general rule, be stopped if the shipper so desires only at concentration points named in the tariff sheet, which in the instance before us, as already stated, was Wichita Falls. If the provisions of the tariff sheets stopped here, it would follow without question, we think, that the freight as actually demanded of, and paid by, appellee was the proper amount. But among other things, the tariff sheets, embodied in'the court’s conclusions of facts, have the following:
“1. The object and purpose of these rules is to permit the movement of cotton and cotton *224 Outers in bales to transit point for marketing, compression, storage, grading, conditioning, marking and reshipment under the conditions of these rules.
“2. If high water, accidents, breakdowns, damage, destruction by fire, receipts beyond capacity, or other cause, renders any compress unavailable for prompt service or inaccessible to the carrier such carrier reserves the right to use any other available compress without additional charge to the shipper.”
Considering the object of the rules together with the exceptions or variations therefrom, as above quoted, we are of the opinion that the carrier had the right to permit appellee to interrupt the shipment of his cotton at Ft. Worth for the purpose of conditioning it, and to do so without additional charge. It is clear that had the cotton been shipped in its original form as delivered to the carrier at Grand-field, the proper rate by the tariff sheets would have been but 70 cents per hundredweight. The findings show that at Ft. Worth as much as 800 pounds of sand was found in one or more of the bales of cotton. It carinot be said to have been wholly without interest to the carrier, as well' as to the shipper, to have the cotton properly conditioned. The rules as a whole evidently contemplated and'provided for concentration, compressing, and conditioning points at which the cotton must be conditioned, unless in case of circumstances falling within a variation of the rules as provided for in the tariff sheets themselves. And this case, we think, falls within the exception.
The trial court’s conclusions of fact and law will be adopted, and the judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
220 S.W. 223, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaff-v-kennedy-texapp-1920.