Wichita Valley Ry. Co. v. Baldwin

263 S.W. 1090, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1924
DocketNo. 10740.
StatusPublished

This text of 263 S.W. 1090 (Wichita Valley Ry. Co. v. Baldwin) 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
Wichita Valley Ry. Co. v. Baldwin, 263 S.W. 1090, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

This appeal by the Wichita Valley Railway Company is from a judgment rendered against it in favor of J. L. Baldwin for $500 damages sustained to a shipment of cattle made by the plaintiff, Baldwin, from Haskell, Tex., to St. Louis, Mo. There were seven cars of cattle in the shipment.

According to allegations in plaintiff’s petition, there was a delay of 26 hours in defendant’s stock pens before starting the shipment after defendant had accepted them. During that delay the cattle were without water, due to defendant’s failure to furnish facilities for watering them in the shipping pens. While being loaded on the" ears one calf was permitted to escape and was never recovered by the plaintiff. The delay in starting the shipment from Haskell, and the failure to furnish facilities for watering them, was alleged to be negligence. According to further allegations in the petition, after the cattle started from Haskell, and while en route to St. Louis, the defendant negligently kept them confined in the cars without feed and water for an unreasonable length of time, and handled them negligently, permitting the cars in which they were loaded to be jammed and knocked into by other cdrs, as the result of which the cattle were bruised, skinned, and thrown down, and thereby their market value was greatly depreciated. According to further allegations, due to lack of feed and water, one cow died. Damages were claimed as a result of the negligence so alleged.

Among other defenses, the defendant alleged that, while it was the initial carrier, it did not in fact transport the cattle any further than to Wichita Falls, Tex., the remainder of the trip being over connecting lines; that it transported the cattle from Haskell, Tex., to Wichita Falls within a reasonable time and without damage. It was further alleged thg.t the plaintiff voluntarily, and without the consent or knowledge of the defendant, placed his cattle in defendant’s stock pens at Haskell at about 6:50 o’clock p. m. on January 3, 1922, on Friday, after he was notified by the defendant’s agent that the train upon which plaintiff desired his cattle to be transported would not start from Haskell until Saturday evening, January 14, more than 24 hours after the cattle were placed in the pens. It was further alleged that plaintiff knew that the pens at Haskell were not provided with facilities for' watering the cattle, and therefore he was guilty of contributory negligence in placing them in the pens on January 13th, which would be a bar to a recovery of any damages sustained by the cattle while in those pens, due to the delay thereby caused or due to the lack of water.

Defendant further alleged that plaintiff assumed the task of loading the cattle at Haskell with the aid of the train- crew furnished hy defendant, who were placed under his control in that work, and that therefore, if the calf escaped, as alleged, during such loading operations, the loss thereof was not chargeable to the defendant. It was further alleged that the shipment was made under and by virtue of a written contract entered into with the plaintiff, by one provision of which the plaintiff agreed, at his own risk and expense, to take care of, feed, water, and attend to the stock while the same were in the pens awaiting shipment, while the same were being loaded, and while the same were being transported to St. Louis; also to unload and reload them at feeding and transferring points. The contract further stipulated that plaintiff should hold the carrier harmless on account of any loss or dam *1092 age to the cattle while being so cared for' and attended to by him or his agents, except such "damages as might result from the negligence of the carrier. The contract further stipulated that the undertaking on the part of the plaintiff to so handle and care for the stock was in consideration of the ágreement of the defendant to furnish him free transportation for himself and his agent, Lewis, which was done.

The defendant pleaded a further' stipulation in the contract by the terms of which the plaintiff agreed that the cattle might be confined in the cars for 36 hours without unloading for feed, water, or rest. The defendant further alleged that, if the cattle were injured and depreciated in market value, as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, such damage was occasioned by plaintiff’s own negligence, a^d not as the result of any fault or negligence on the part of defendant.

The evidence showed that the cattle were placed in defendant’s stock pens at Haskell late in the afternoon on Friday, and were not shipped out until late in the afternoon of Saturday following. During that time they were without water on account of the fact that there were no facilities in the pens for watering. It was further shown that the cattle accompanied another shipment of cattle by Swenson Bros., which started at Stamford and reached Haskell about 7 o’clock Saturday afternoon, both shipments going by the same train. The evidence further-showed that while plaintiff’s cattle were being loaded at Haskell one calf escaped and was lost, and when the shipment reached Muskogee, Old., one cow was lost, as the result, according to the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses, of drinking too much water. The uncontradicted testimony further showed that the cattle were fed by plaintiff while in the pens at Haskell with hay which he bought, but they ■ had no water from the time they were placed in the pens at Haskell until they reached Muskogee, early Monday morning. At Muskogee they were unloaded, fed, and -watered, and after a rest of several hours they were reloaded and reached St. Louis about 7 o’clock Wednesday morning.

Plaintiff introduced testimony tending tb .show that between Muskogee and St. Louis there was a head-on collision of the train, as a result of which the cattle were knocked down, bruised, and skinned. W. T. Hudson, one of plaintiff’s witnesses, testified that he was an experienced cattle shipper, and that in his opinion) a shipment of cattle leaving Haskell on Saturday night, with a reasonable run, should reach St. Louis on Tuesday morning following, 24 hours earlier than plaintiffs cattle reached their destination.

The defendant offered testimony of several trainmen who handled the cattle between Plaskell and St. Louis, all of whom testified, in effect, that the cattle were handled with reasonable dispatch and without any unusual jolts or jará of the ears, and that no complaint of any rough handling was made by the shippers in charge. The testimony so offered was in depositions of those witnesses. It was objected to on the ground that the same was from .records which the witnesses had not proved to have been correctly made. That objection, which was offered to the testimony of each witness, was sustained. That ruling was erroneous, since the bills of exception do not show that the testimony was based merely upon the records kept by the witnesses. The facts detailed by them were testified to as being true without reference to any records kept by the witnesses. The testimony so excluded was in rebuttal of the testimony offered by plaintiff to show rough handling and negligent delay. And the error in excluding that testimony will require a reversal of the judgment, independently of the merits of the other errors assigned.

In view of another trial we deem it proper to briefly discuss in a general way some other assignments for the guidance of the trial judge.

The court gave a general charge instead of submitting the case on special issues.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 1090, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wichita-valley-ry-co-v-baldwin-texapp-1924.