Turner v. Henderson

183 S.W. 51, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1317
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1915
DocketNo. 5540.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 183 S.W. 51 (Turner v. Henderson) 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
Turner v. Henderson, 183 S.W. 51, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1317 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

KEY, C. J.

U. Henderson, Will Dibrell, and H. Kingsbury brought this suit against the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway company and the receivers of the Ft. Worth & Rio Grande Railway Company, and recovered a verdict and judgment for damages to a shipment of cattle from Menard, Tex., to Brownwood, Tex. No judgment was rendered against the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway Company, and the receivers of the other company have appealed.

Appellants averred in their answer that the shipment was made under three written contracts, one between appellants and appel-lee Henderson, covering 219 head, another between appellants and appellee Kingsbury, covering 70 head, and the third between appellants and appellee Dibrell, covering 111 head of the cattle shipped; and appellants specially pleaded as a defense a stipulation in the contracts referred to, wherein appel-lees agreed, as a condition precedent to any right of action for loss or injury to the property shipped, or for delay in transporting same, or for decline in the market, to give notice in writing, setting out in detail a full statement of the losses, injuries, delay, and decline in the market for which damages are claimed, and the amount thereof within 120 days after the same shall have been occasioned, to some trafile officer, station agent, or other convenient local agent of the carrier. Appellants further alleged that such stipulation was, under the facts and circumstances of the case, a reasonable stipulation.

Replying to appellants’ answer, appellees *52 denied that the written contracts pleaded by appellants were executed by appellees or either of them or by their authority. They further averred, in substance, that if they executed the contracts, they were without consideration and void, because of the fact that they were executed after appellants had received and accepted the cattle for shipment under a prior contract, that appellants demanded the signing of the contracts as a condition precedent to proceeding with the transportation of the cattle, and refused to transport same under the original contract, and that no additional consideration was received or paid for the execution of such written contracts. These allegations were specifically denied by appellants, as were all the other material allegations contained in appellees’ pleadings.

Without discussing in detail the various assignments of error presented in appellants’ brief, we announce our conclusions upon the merits of the appeal as follows:

The written contracts pleaded by appellants were introduced in evidence. The testimony shows that the stipulation in reference to notice was reasonable, and was not complied with, and fails to show any reason why the contracts are not valid and enforceable; and in support of these conclusions • we copy from the statement of facts the testimony given by appellees themselves:

“My name is Upton Henderson. I am one of the plaintiffs in this case. I live at Coleman, Coleman county, Tex. I and the other plaintiffs delivered 419 head of cattle to Avery Turner and G. H. Schleyer, receivers of the Et. Worth & Rio Grande Railway Company at Menard, Tex., 400 cows and 19 calves. They were put in the stock pens at Menard late Saturday afternoon, and loaded the next morning, Sunday morning, the 5th day of October, 1913. I had a conversation with Mr. Lang or some one Sunday morning. I think that was him; some one in the office. I don’t know whether it was their agent here that was in the office. X had the conversation there with the man that was representing the railway company Sunday morning at the Frisco office at Menard. The man I was talking to was in charge of the office there. I told him how I wanted the cattle billed. I told him to Santa Anna. He said: ‘All right.’ The cattle were then in the stock pens. I was in his presence when I asked him if the cars were ready. I took the cattle and put them in the pens, and told him that I wanted the cattle billed. I went up to the stock pens, walked on up there; it was about three-quarters of a mile; and I think they were up there to load the cattle. The train X think was there before I got there, or very shortly afterwards, and started to load. They loaded them. It was the Ft. Worth & Rio Grande, the railroad from Menardville to Brownwood. It was pretty early in the morning Sunday, I suppose, maybe, 7:30, when I went up to the stock pens. It was not raining; both Sunday and Monday were sunshine weather. It was not raining when we got to Brownwood. After the cattle were loaded, I think we all rode down on the cars to the station — about three-quarters of a mile, I guess, a good long distance. At that time neither myself nor any of these plaintiffs had signed any written documents with reference to this shipment. None had been presented to me for signing by the company at that time. The movement of the cattle from the stock pens to the depot was in the direction of Brownwood, in the direction of Santa Anna by rail. As to the condition of the cars, the floors, the way they were bedded, as to whether they were slick, wet or dry, I only examined the last two ears prior to loading, and I immediately went to look at the one into which they were fixing to load, and I says: ‘You can’t load into that car; its full of water.’ I spoke to the man loading the cattle. He said: ‘They are all that way.’ They were pretty near all that way. The water was standing in puddles in places. One place three or four feet square looked like two inches deep in the car. I looked at the rest of them there, and they were standing in mud and slush, all of them. There were 11 cars. They had been bedded prior to the time I arrived there that morning. They remained in that condition all the way to Santa Anna. I accompanied these cattle from Menard to Santa Anna. One of those cattle was injured in loading there at Menard. One was injured at Menard in putting her in the chute to the car, and as she was being loaded her hind legs dropped in between a part of the chute and the platform at the stock pens, but she got in after they helped her up, but she was hurt in the hips, and some of the other cows run over her, but there was only one hurt there. As to the condition of the cattle when they arrived at Santa Anna, they arrived 4 dead, or 5. One we could not get up, and afterwards died, and several head more of them were badly bruised up. There were 4 dead, and 1 aft-erwards ; we could not get it up, and I understand that it died afterwards. O, yes, sir; there was a market value for those cattle, those that died and those that were injured or bruised at Santa Anna at the time of the delivery. I think I was acquainted with the market value at the time of delivery. As to my experience in selling and buying cattle, I buy and sell quite a good deal, a bunch or two every year. I deal in cattle, raise them, and sell them. Right around $50 would have been the reasonable market value of those cattle that were killed and the one that I understand afterwards died, if delivered at Santa Anna alive and without any injuries or negligence on the part of the defendants — $50 a head. If one of these was a calf, then one of them about $18 or $20. Some of the other cattle that were delivered at Santa Anna were delivered in an injured condition. Some of them had rubbed against the cars and were skinned up. Some were skinned on the tail bones and had rubbed against the cars. As to whether the cars were handled so that they were jostled about or run smoothly and easily, well, the roadbed was pretty rough, and they had a good deal of switching along the road.

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.W. 51, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-henderson-texapp-1915.