Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Wilson Hack Line

101 S.W. 1171, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 38, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 1171 (Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Wilson Hack Line) 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
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Wilson Hack Line, 101 S.W. 1171, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 38, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 10 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

The this case The Wilson Hack Line, a corporation of that name, sued the Texas & Pacific Railway Company and the International & Great Northern Railroad Company to recover the value of five broughams, the property of plaintiff, which were shipped from St. Louis, destination Houston, Texas, and which, it was alleged, had been lost by reason of the negligence of defendants. The evidence showed that the property was lost while in the possession of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company and that the International & Great Northern Railroad Company was not liable, and the court instructed a verdict for the latter company. The case between plaintiff and the Texas & Pacific Railway Company was submitted to a jury who returned a verdict for plaintiff for $1,852.32 as the value of the goods, with interest amounting to $128.12, for which amount judgment was rendered from which defendant appeals. The material facts are as follows:

Wilson, president of appellee company, bought of the St. Louis Transfer Company in St. Louis a lot of vehicles, among them the five broughams. They were sold to appellee “St. Louis delivery,” that is, the goods were to, be delivered to the carrier in St. Louis by the seller as the property of appellee which was- to pay freight. This seems to have been the intention of both parties to be gathered from the testimony of Wilson; appellee’s president, and Tansey, the president of the St. Louis Transfer Company whose deposition was taken by appellant. The price of the nine vehicles sold was $1,450 which was not paid at the time, and the goods were delivered by the St. Louis Company to the carrier at St. Louis, for carriage to Houston, Texas, and delivery there to “shippers order, notify Wilson Hack Line.” The St. Louis Company drew a draft on appellee for the price and sent it to a bank in Houston for collection with the bill of lading attached endorsed1 “Deliver to the order of Wilson Hack Line. (Signed) St. Louis Transfer Company. G. B. Walls, Secty. and Treas.” When notified of the arrival of tire draft appellee paid it and took the bill of lading. The vehicles- had been shipped in two cars and when Wilson applied to the freight office of the connecting' carrier in Houston he was informed that both cars' were there, whereupon he paid the freight upon the whole shipment. Afterwards he found that the car containing the five broughams had not arrived and the freight for that car was refunded to him. The five broughams- were all lost while in possession of appellant, one of the connecting carriers, and by its negligence.

Hnder the first sixteen assignments of error, which are presented together, appellant presents the proposition that the assignee of a bill of lading cannot recover more than his assignor could recover, being the original consignee; and upon one such contract there are not two measures of recovery in different amounts in different hands. Appel *41 lant’s contention is that the St. Louis Transfer Company having shipped their property to Houston to be there sold to appellee for a certain price could not have recovered of appellant more than the price for which the goods were to be sold, and that therefore appellee cannot in this suit recover more.

It is true that the St. Louis Company could not have recovered of appellee more than the amount stated, in case appellee had not paid for the property. (Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. v. Key, 16 S. W. Rep., 106.) This for the sufficient reason that this would have been the measure of its loss. It does not follow, however, that appellee is bound by the same measure of damages. We think appellant is mistaken as to the main basis of its contention. The goods were sold in St. Louis, and not shipped to Houston to be there sold in case they arrived. Both the seller and buyer intended that the delivery to the carrier was a delivery of the property in the goods to appellee, and that they were thereafter at its risk. The effect of the consignment to the seller or his order, as set out in the bill of lading, was to give the right of possession of the goods to the seller, until the purchase money was paid. The property passed, but the right of possession was not to pass' until the draft for the price was paid, and the bill of lading delivered. Upon the facts of the agreement, as testified to by both appellee’s president Wilson, and Tansey, the president of the St. Louis Company, if appellee had refused payment of the draft, the amount could have been recovered of it by the St. Louis Company, and appellee would have been relegated to its remedy against the carrier, nevertheless the St. Louis Company could have recovered of the carriers the amount which appellee owed, by reason of its lien, to protect which they retained possession of the goods. (1 Parson on Contracts, 526, 537; 6 Cyc. 527; Pilgreen v. State, 71 Ala., 370; State v. Carl, 43 Ark., 353-359.)

It does not matter whether appellee acquired the bill of lading before or after the destruction of the property. The bill of lading was only necessary to enable it to get possession of the goods, the property in them having passed by agreement of the parties upon delivery to the carrier in St. Louis. It was in the power of the seller and purchaser to make such an agreement, and if would not concern the carrier that they had done so. Its duty was to transport and deliver the goods, and its liability, in the case of loss, was for their value, unless it should! appear that a less amount would fully cover the damages for which recovery is sought. (Jelletts v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co., 15 N. W. Rep., 237.)

Assignments of error from seventeen to thirty are likewise grouped, and under them appellant presents the general proposition that, “The vehicles being seeondLhand, and having probably passed through many hands, and they having no- market value, the measure of damages, (their value to their owner and the actual loss he sustained, not a price suggested by his- partiality, nor yet what he could sell them for, subject to our first position) is provable by the history of the vehicles, as- far as the sarnie could be obtained, and this history should be as complete as possible, commencing with the original first cost of these vehicles, when new, and coming to the present time, tracing the different *42 hands they had passed through, giving an account of the amount of use they had undergone, their wear and tear, number of times they had been sold, and for what prices, and showing whether they were in or out of style.”

The vehicles were second-hand and it seems to be admitted that they had no market value in Houston. The term “second-hand” is a general one and refers to articles that have been before sold and used, whether one or many times does not matter. In determining their value in Houston at the time they should have been delivered much evidence was offered, all of which was objected to by appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 1171, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 38, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-railway-co-v-wilson-hack-line-texapp-1907.