Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Crowder
This text of 165 S.W. 116 (Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Crowder) 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
This suit was instituted in the county court of Martin county, Tex., by T. S. Crowder and F. W. Flanigan, partners, composing the firm of Crowder & Flani-gan, plaintiffs below and appellees herein, against the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, defendant below and appellant herein, for conversion of a car load of cattle, consisting of 39 head, shipped from Lindale, Smith county, and consigned to Stanton, Martin county, on December 28, 1911, plaintiffs suing for the alleged total value of-said cattle in the sum of $953, plaintiffs alleging that they tendered said cattle to the International & Great Northern Railroad Company at Lin-dale, and entered into a written contract with said railroad company, whereby the latter contracted with plaintiffs to transport said cattle and deliver same to its connecting carrier the deféndant, the Texas & Pacific Rail *117 way Company, to be transported by tbe latter and delivered at Stanton to tbe plaintiff F. W. -Flanigan; that said International & Great Northern Railroad Company accepted and received said cattle, and transported them to Mineóla, and there delivered them to the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, but that the latter did not carefully transport and deliver said cattle to plaintiff at Stanton, as was its duty under the law, but instead retained possession of said cattle and appropriated same to its own use and benefit, to plaintiff’s damage in the total value of said cattle, amounting to $953. The defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial, and specially answered that if it sold or converted plaintiffs’ cattle, which it expressly denied, it did so for the reason that upon arrival of said cattle at Ft. Worth from Lindale, it became necessary, under the laws and quarantine rules and regulations of the state of Texas and of the United States, to dip said cattle in some mixture prescribed by said authorities before the same could be further transported towards their destination ; that upon arrival of said cattle at Ft. Worth the plaintiffs abandoned same, and refused to have anything further to do with them, or to authorize or require their dipping, as required by the authorities mentioned, and that this defendant was not authorized or required to have such dipping done; that said dipping of said cattle was also rendered impossible by reason of their poor, • weak, and thin condition at the time tendered the defendant for transportation, and at the time of their arrival at Ft. Worth. The cause was tried before a jury on June 20, 1913, and upon peremptory instructions from the court to find for the plaintiffs, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $750.
The appellant’s first and second assignments of error charge that the court erred: (a) In peremptorily instructing a verdict in favor of appellee; (b) in not giving peremptory instructions for appellant as requested. Its proposition being that the uncontroverted evidence showed that this is a suit for conversion of a car load of cattle from a point east of the quarantine line to a point west of the line; that the state and federal laws prohibit such shipments without the cattle being dipped, and that appellee failed and refused to comply with the said regulations, and thereby prevented the delivery of the cattle. The railway company was therefore not liable. Appellees’ counter proposition is that in the shipment of cattle, wherein it is necessary for them to be dipped before reaching their destination, and they are being transported without an attendant, it is the duty of the railway company to include in its shipping contract all necessary releases and authority for dipping them, and, having failed to do so, and such failure upon the part of appellant being the cause of nondelivery of the cattle at destination, the court did not err in instructing verdict for appellees. The appellees pleaded an express contract to safely transport the cattle in question from Lindale, a point east of the quarantine line to Stanton, a point west of the line, with no allegation that the contract so pleaded did not cover all the obligations of the railway company in connection with the cattle delivered.
The fourth assignment is disposed of by what is stated above.
Reversed and remanded.
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165 S.W. 116, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-p-ry-co-v-crowder-texapp-1914.