Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Vance

3 Tenn. App. 152, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 28, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Tenn. App. 152 (Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Vance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Vance, 3 Tenn. App. 152, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 81 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

This suit was begun before a justice of the peace of Overton county by Dewey Vance against the Tennessee Central Railway Company, and from a judgment in favor of Yance the Railway Company appealed to the circuit court of Overton county, where the case was tried before the circuit judge, without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of Yance and against the Railway Company for $61.25 and “all the costs of the case except the plaintiff’s witnesses.”

A motion for a new trial on behalf of the Railway Company was overruled, and the Railway Company thereupon prayed an appeal (in error) to this court, which was granted by the trial court and perfected by the Railway Company.

Although the Railway Company is plaintiff in error, we will, for convenience, refer to Dewey Yance as plaintiff and to the Railway Company as defendant.

A preliminary question is raised by a motion on behalf of defendant Railway Company “to dismiss defendant in error’s cause of action for want of prosecution bond.” It appears that no prosecution bond, that is, no bond for costs, was executed by plaintiff when the suit was instituted, and none was ever filed or tendered in either of the lower courts. We are of the opinion that a prosecu-' tion bond was not essential to the jurisdiction of the Justice of the Peace or the circuit court, and a fortiori is not essential to the jurisdiction of this court.

' It is provided by section 4927, Shannon’s Code, that “any person required by law to give security for costs may, at any stage of the cause, be ruled to give such security, if it has not previously been done, or to justify or give new security on sufficient cause shown. ’ ’

The statute.just quoted does not afford authority for this court to sustain defendarit’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s suit, or to make a rule on plaintiff to file a cost bond in the cause. The phrase “at any stage of the cause,” as used in the statute, means at any time before the judgment in the trial court. Stewart v. Wilcox, 1 Lea, 81; Scoggins v. Cowden, 1 Lea, 135; Allen v. Harris, 4 Lea, 192; State, for use, etc. v. Gannaway, 16 Lea, 129.

However, the plaintiff, although resisting the motion to dismiss his suit and denying the power of this court to require him to file a prosecution bond, has voluntarily tendered a bond for costs, in *154 the penalty of $250, with J. S. Fleming as surety, and has thereby waived the lack of power in this court to require such bond. The' bond thus tendered will therefore be filed as a part of the rec-' ord in the cause. The defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s suit will be denied and overruled.

The cause of action stated in the warrant is “a plea of debt for damages in or for failure to deliver for plaintiff a car-load of hogs to Nashville, Tenn., as it had agreed and contracted to do and deliver, under $100. ’ ’

Plaintiff delivered ninety-five hogs, loaded in a railroad stock ear, to defendant at Algood, a station on defendant’s road, in the morning of Friday, May 8, 1925, for shipment to Nashville, a distance of about 90 miles. According to defendant’s usual schedule, the car of hogs should have been “picked up” by one of defendant’s freight trains on Friday afternoon and delivered at the stock yards in Nashville on Saturday morning, in time for the hogs to be sold on the Saturday market.

Defendant’s station agent, whose duty it was to see that the car was moved from Algood, failed, through oversight, to give the necessary instructions or notice to the crew of defendant’s freight train on Friday afternoon, and, as a result of this neglect on the part of defendant’s station agent, the car of hogs did not leave Al-good until Saturday afternoon.

The hogs were delivered at the stock yards in Nashville on Sunday, May 10th, and were sold on the market of Monday, May 11th.

It is not denied that the failure of the plaintiff’s hogs to reach' Nashville on Saturday morning was due to the neglect of defendant’s station agent, but it is insisted for defendant that there is no evidence that plaintiff was injured by the delay.

It is admitted that plaintiff did not lose the benefit of a favorable market by the delay; that is to say, plaintiff’s testimony is that the price at which he sold the hogs on Monday was as good as he could have obtained on the preceding Saturday.

But plaintiff claims that, by reason of the delay in transportation, the hogs lost several hundred pounds in weight, and that plaintiff was onerated with the expense of two extra feed bills.

The trial judge found that plaintiff ‘ ‘ sustained a loss of 5 lbs. per head of the 95 hogs, or 475 lbs. at the price of 11 cts. per pound, together with a feed bill of $9.50, making a total loss of $61.25” sustained by plaintiff “account of delayed shipment by the defendant. ’ ’

It is contended for defendant that there is no evidence in the record that there was a shrinkage in the weight of the hogs as the result of the aforesaid delay in transportation, unless it be found in certain speculative and conjectural testimony of the plaintiff and *155 bis witnesses Fleming, Windle and Hargrove, wbicb was admitted over the objection of defendant, and the admission of which is made the basis of assignments of error in this court, as well as in the motion for a new trial below.

It appears from the record that plaintiff bought 320 hogs at Chanute and drove them on foot from Chanute to Livingston, a distance of 30 or 35 miles,-and fed them well on corn for six or seven days at Livingston, in a lot where they had plenty of water; that he then selected 95 of the largest of the drove of hogs and loaded them on a railroad car at Livingston and shipped them over the T. K. & N. Railroad to Algood (a distance of 17 or 18 miles), reaching Algood during the same morning on which they were loaded at Livingston, viz: May 8, 1925.; that on reaching Algood they were immediately “re-billed” by defendant Tennessee Central Railway Company for shipment over the line of defendant to Nashville, but, for the reason before stated, the car did not leave Algood until Saturday afternoon and did not reach Nashville until Sunday morning. The hogs were unloaded and fed by defendant Railway Company at Algood.

The 95 hogs thus shipped weighed 18,985 pounds at the time plaintiff bought them at Chanute, and weigh 18,460 pounds when delivered at the stock yards at Nashville, — a difference of 435 pounds. They were not weighed after they left Chanute until they reached the stock yards at Nashville. The car was “billed” at 16,000 pounds at Algood, but it is shown without dispute that the weight was fixed in the 'waybill at 16,000 pounds because that was the minimum weight of a carload of hogs allowed by the railroad tariff schedules.

The testimony of plaintiff and the witnesses by whom he undertook to show that the hogs lost -weight between the time of their delivery to defendant at Algood and their arrival at the Nashville stock yards was, in substance, merely an expression of the opinion of the witnesses that the 95 hogs lost weight while they were in the custody of the Railway Company.

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Related

Mitchell v. Richardson
213 S.W.2d 111 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. App. 152, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-central-railway-co-v-vance-tennctapp-1926.