W. A. Morgan & Bros. v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co.

110 S.W. 978, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 420, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 604
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 110 S.W. 978 (W. A. Morgan & Bros. v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway 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
W. A. Morgan & Bros. v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co., 110 S.W. 978, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 420, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 604 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

McMEANS, Associate Justice.

This suit, as tried on an amended petition filed May 16, 1906, was a suit by W. A. Morgan & Brothers and the Austin Fire Insurance Company and the Hartford Fire Insurance Company and the Insurance Company of North America to recover of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company of Texas, the sum of $34,000 as damage by fire to 598 bales of cotton, occurring at La Grange, Texas, on the 27th day of February, 1906, through the negligence of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company of Texas. The Railway Company vouched in the La Grange & Lockhart Compress Company and John Schumacher and C. Von Rosenberg, asking judgment over against them in the event the Railway Company was cast, and against them if the Compress Company was not bound by the contract they made for it. Defendant Rail way Company dismissed as to Schumacher and Von Rosenberg. Trial was had before a jury, which, under the charge of the court, returned a verdict for the defendants, upon which judgment was entered. Motion for new trial having been overruled, this appeal is prosecuted.

The negligence alleged was, in part, that the Railway Company failed to have proper engines and appliances to prevent the escape of sparks and the setting out of fires; it neglected to use proper care to keep the engines and appliances in good repair, and neglected and failed to properly handle and operate its engines and cars and trains to prevent the escape of sparks and the setting out of fires; that it neglected to exercise ordinary care in the use of proper fuel to prevent the escape of sparks, and neglected exercising care to provide proper employes to handle its engines and cars and trains. That its engines, trains and cars were very recklessly, carelessly and unskillfully handled and managed in such a way as to cause or permit sparks to escape and set out fires. That said defendant did negligently and carelessly permit fire and sparks to escape from the engine onto the cotton, and permit and cause the cotton to be burned thereby; and did run its trains in and through the town of La Grange and over and along and across the streets thereof at a rate or speed of 25 miles an hour in violation of an ordinance forbidding the running at a speed exceeding six miles an hour, and did thereby cause the fire which injured, damaged and destroyed the cotton; that defendant was negligent in using coal as fuel instead of fuel oil, which would have prevented any escape of sparks and the fire,

*427 The Railway Company in its answer denied any negligence on its part causing the fire, alleged that plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence causing or contributing to their own loss; that the Railway Company had a contract at the time of the alleged loss with the Compress Company under and by the terms of which the Compress Company undertook to hold the Railway Company harmless from any losses by fire caused by the Railway Company to the property of the Compress Company, or situated on its platforms, including the property of the plaintiffs; that the Compress Company when it received the cotton of the plaintiff made a contract with the plaintiff by the terms of which it was stipulated that the cotton should be held at owner’s risk, and that the Compress Company should not be responsible for loss or damage by fire or water, in consequence whereof plaintiffs should not recover, or in any event, if plaintiffs should recover, that the Compress Company be made a party, and if judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, that the Railway Company have judgment over against the Compress Company.

The Compress Company denies that it, by its contract with the Railway Company, undertook to hold the Railway Company harmless as to loss and damage to property of third parties; says that the contract was only intended to apply to property owned by the Compress Company, and was not intended to apply to the property of the plaintiffs; that this meaning had been acted upon by the parties in their dealings with each other in regard to the contract; that the contract was framed and the language selected and adopted by the Railway Company in which the Compress Company had no part; that its charter only authorized it to do a compress business; that it was not authorized to do any indemnity or insurance business, and that any construction of the contract undertaking to make it hold the Railway Company harmless would be ultra vires: Said defendant further pleaded that when it received the cotton destroyed from the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company of Texas, it issued to the Railway Company a receipt which specified that the cotton was held at owner’s risk, and that the Compress Company should not be liable for loss or damage by fire to the same.

Plaintiffs by supplemental pleadings by exception questioned the right of the Railway Company to vouch in the Compress Company, and excepted to the sufficiency of the contract set up, and the receipt set up as constituting a defense to plaintiffs’ cause of action. They averred in reply that plaintiffs never at any time prior to the filing of the suit knew of the existence or contents of the contract between the Railway Company and the Compress Company, and did not know- of the terms of the receipts issued by the Compress Company set up as defense; that the taking of the receipt by the Railway Company and the issuing of the receipt to the Railway Company by the Compress Company were fraudulent as to plaintiffs and without force; that plaintiffs were not parties to the contract between the Railway Company and the Compress Company.; that the contract was, as to the Compress Company, ultra vires and void; that the Railway Company in hauling plaintiffs’ cotton and delivering it to the Compress Company had no power or authority to take any receipts discharging, any claims for *428 loss or damage in favor of the plaintiffs which might arise, and further, that the Compress Company, as a public warehouseman, was forbidden to limit its liability; that the contract between the Compress Company and the Railway Company and the receipts pretended to be taken by the Railway Company from the Compress Company for the cotton, were contrary to public policy, were a fraud on the rights of the plaintiffs, and were not binding on the parties from whom knowledge of the existence of these various contracts was withheld and concealed ; that neither the receipts nor contract were made or authorized by Morgan & Brothers; that in so far as the leaving of the cotton uncompressed on platforms constituted contributory negligence, such negligence was that of the Railway Company, in as much as its bills of lading provided, “this Railway Company reserves to itself the privilege of compressing all cotton signed for under this bill of lading that the contract 'between the Compress Company and the Railway Company was beyond the power of the Compress Company to lawfully make; that even though plaintiffs should be -held guilty of contributory negligence, nevertheless defendant Railway Company discovered the peril of plaintiffs’ property and knew of the plaintiffs’ absence and ignorance of such peril, and disregarded the safety of plaintiffs’ property, .but negligently, with this knowledge, failed to exercise reasonable care after the discovery of the peril in which plaintiffs’ property was, to prevent its destruction by fire which caused the injury and damage to plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W. 978, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 420, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-a-morgan-bros-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railway-co-texapp-1908.