St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Hughston Grain Co.

186 S.W. 429, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 10, 1916
DocketNo. 992.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 429 (St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Hughston Grain 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
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Hughston Grain Co., 186 S.W. 429, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 654 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

The appellees brought suit against the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas, and the International & Great Northern Railway Company, for $521.-05, and interest. Damages are alleged to have been sustained to a shipment of a car of corn. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of the appellees, against both defendants, for the sum of $559.10, with interest, with a judgment in favor of the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company, over against the International & Great Northern for a like amount. From this judgment the appeal is prosecuted.

On the 15th day of November, 1913, the Tom Bean Grain Company, at Tom Bean, Grayson county, f£ex., a station on the line of the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas, designated as the “Cotton Belt,” delivered a car of corn to that road, to be shipped and delivered at Eloise, Tex., a station on the International & Great Northern Railway Company, the bill of lading stipulating that notice was to be given to the Hughston Grain Company. This company had contracted to sell the car to Nash-Robinson & Co., who resided at Marlin, but directed the ear to be delivered at Eloise, Tex. The Cotton Belt received the car at Tom Bean and issued its bill of lading for a through shipment. The Cotton Belt carried the car to Ft. Worth, and there delivered it to the International & Great Northern Railway Company in good condition. It was transported over the rest of the route by the latter road. It appears that the ear was afterwards hauled into Marlin, and the trial court finds the corn was then in a worthless condition. There was no other bill of lading issued by the connecting carrier, but it is in-ferable that the shipment was taken through on the same bill, and freight paid without change of car. There is no other contract shown than the one executed by the initial carrier. The corn, when delivered to the initial carrier, was in good and merchantable condition, on November 15, 1913. When it was tendered to Nash-Robinson December 12 or 14th, it was worthless, and was not accepted by that company. The appellees were the owners, and under the contract to deliver merchantable corn retained the title thereto. The contract stipulates that:

The Cotton Belt agrees to safely deliver at its ■usual place of delivery at the destination, if on its road; otherwise, to deliver to another carrier on the route to destination. “In issuing this bill of lading this company agrees to transport only over its own line, and except as otherwise provided by law, acts only as agent with respect to the portion of the route beyond its own line. No carrier shall be liable for loss, damage or injury not occurring on its own road or_ its portion of the through route, nor after said property has been delivered to the next carrier, except as such liability is or may be imposed by law; but nothing contained in this bill of lading shall be deemed to exempt the initial carrier from any such liability so imposed.”

[1] The Cotton Belt, under its first and second assignments, asserts error in the findings of fact by the trial court, to the effect that the shipment was a through shipment, and to the conclusion of law that the shipment was a through one. In support of its propositions it cites Railway Co. v. Jones, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 132, 124 S. W. 194; Railway Co. v. Chittim, 135 S. W. 747; Elder, Dempster v. Railway Co., 105 Tex. 628, 154 S. W. 975; Railway Co. v. Grady, 171 S. W. 1019. In the Jones Case, supra, our Supreme Court (104 Tex. 96, 134 S. W. 330) held:

“To bring a contract * * * within the terms of article 331a, the contract entered into by the first carrier must be for carriage from the point of shipment to the destination, and the shipment must be received and carried by the connecting carriers under that contract.”

The evidence in that case shows that the cattle were unloaded at the intersection of the two roads and reloaded into other cars belonging to the connecting carrier. The latter road in that case did not recognize and accept under the original contract. The Supreme Court said, in that case, there must be something other than receiving the shipment because the law required it to do that. Mr. Justice Hawkins, speaking for the Supreme Court, in the Elder Case, supra, at page 648 of 105 Tex., at page 986, of 154 S. W., said:

“It will be observed that by its own express terms, as pointed out in the last-mentioned decision of this court, the effect of this statute is limited to cases in which there is a contract for through carriage which has been ‘recognized, acquiesced in, or acted upon’ by such connecting carriers. Now, when that status exists, there is *431 no reason for the application of the rule which was announced in the Baird Case, supra, and the cases following it. There is therefore no conflict whatever between said article 331a and 331b and those decisions.”

These articles are now in Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, arts. 731, 732. The decisions referred to by Mr. Justice Hawkins announce the proposition that the accepting carrier of the freight could not be held to have ratified the contract because it performs some of the services contemplated by it when it was not at liberty — contract or no contract — to refuse to render the service. If the-facts in this case warrant the finding that the delivering carrier “recognized, acquiesced in, or acted upon” the contract, the stipulation that damages for which the Cotton Belt was liable should be confined to its own acts on its own road would be a through shipment in spite of limiting the damages to its own line. The statute expressly provided such contract is a through shipment, “notwithstanding any stipulation, or attempted stipulation, to the contrary by such carriers, or either of them.” The mere receiving of the freight by the connecting line is not a ratification of the contract. In this case the connecting carrier, not only received the freight, but it did so without limitation or stipulation changing the contract in the least. It carried it forward in the same car to the place designated in the contract as the destination. This occurs to us as a recognition of the contract. It acted upon it. The bare receiving of the car did not make a prima facie case; but receiving and transporting to destination on its line of road, without any new arrangement or contract, as in 'the Jones Case, should be considered, we think, some evidence of recognition. It occurs .to us that it recognized that there was no necessity for a new contract, and continued the shipment under the one made by the initial carrier. We do not clearly perceive the meaning of the clause in the contract in question under consideration—

“that this company agrees to transport only over its own line and except as otherwise provided, by law, acts only as agent, with respect to the portion of the route beyond its own line.”

This clause excludes the idea, we think, that it was acting as the agent of the shipper over the route beyond its line, but implies that it was acting as the agent for that portion of the route. That portion belonged to the International & Great Northern and the Cotton Belt, therefore, acted as agent for the International & Great Northern.

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186 S.W. 429, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-ry-co-v-hughston-grain-co-texapp-1916.