Yates v. Texas & N. O. R.

144 S.W.2d 916
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 1940
DocketNo. 12912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 S.W.2d 916 (Yates v. Texas & N. O. R.) 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
Yates v. Texas & N. O. R., 144 S.W.2d 916 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

BOND, Chief Justice.

The Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company, plaintiff in the court below, instituted this suit against the defendants, Earl Yates and W. O. Yates, copartners, to collect the sum of $1,104.94, alleged to be due on account of deficiency freight rate charged on various shipments of sand and gravel. The Railroad Company, pertinent here, alleged:

“11. That on various dates during the months of February, March, April, and May, 1935, there were consigned to defendants and defendants received and accepted a total of one hundred fifty-seven (157) cars containing gravel or sand, said cars weighing various amounts. These said cars moved from Randol, Texas, and Byron, Texas, which points are situated on the Boisd’arc and Southern Railway, and were consigned to defendants at Appleby, Texas, which is situated on the line of the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company, all as is more fully shown by Exhibit A attached hereto and made a part hereof for all purposes.
“111. That the 157 cars referred to above contained sand and gravel weighing fourteen million seven hundred thirty-seven thousand seven hundred (14,737,700) pounds; that after the delivery of the above-mentioned cars the defendants paid to plaintiff and plaintiff collected from de-' fendants freight charges at the rate of One Dollar and Twenty-five Cents ($1.25) per net ton, and based on said rate plaintiff collected from defendants the sum of Nine Thousand Two Hundred Eleven and 52/100 Dollars ($9,211.52); that after collecting the freight charges at the rate of $1.25 per net ton and after the total sum of $9,211.52 had been collected, plaintiff learned that the rate of $1.25 was not the correct and lawful rate to be charged for such shipments, and plaintiff learned that the rate applicable to such shipments was One Dollar and Forty Cents ($1.40) per net ton, which rate is shown in Texas, Lines Tariff, Agent Cummings 2-N ICC 361, Item 2762; that under the correct rate of $1.40 per net ton the total amount [918]*918of freight charges due plaintiff by defendants on the 157 cars above referred to was and is the sum of Ten Thousand Three Hundred Sixteen and 46/100 Dollars ($10,-316.46) thereby creating an undercharge in the sum of One Thousand One Hundred Four and 94/100 Dollars ($1,104.94) all as is more fully set out in plaintiff’s Exhibit A, which exhibit shows in detail point of origin and date of shipment, car number, weight of sand or gravel in each car, rate applicable, total amount collected for each car at the rate of $1.25 per ton, the amount due at the correct, lawful and applicable rate of $1.40 per net ton and the amount of undercharge on each of the 157 cars.”

To said pleadings, the defendants answered by plea in estoppel, and, also, by way of cross-action, or set-off, alleging that the Railroad Company received and thereafter failed to deliver to the defendants 402 tons of material described in plaintiffs petition, of the reasonable value of $940.02, claimed to have been lost in transit. The answer, material here, is as follows :

“That on or about January 1, 1935, and before these defendants entered into a certain sub-contract with J. S. Moore and Son to perform certain highway construction work, that the' Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company, its servants, agents and employees, represented to these defendants that the freight rate applicable to such shipment of gravel and sand as are described in plaintiff’s original petition, was $1.25 per net ton and relying upon such representations, these defendants did enter into a certain sub-contract with J. S. Moore and Son, believing that said $1.25 rate was correct; but that for such representations on the part of the plaintiff, Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company, its agent, servants and employees, these defendants would not have entered into such sub-contract with J. S. Moore and Son and would not have arranged for and accepted the shipment described in plaintiff’s original petition. Defendants allege that they did rely upon said representations so made and do now rely upon such representations so made and in the event said representations were false, the said plaintiff well knew that said representations were false and quoted said price for the purpose of practicing fraud and deceiving these defendants, together with the public in general as to the correct freight rate, and is therefore estopped to deny their said acts and the said freight rate of $1.25 per ton. In this connection the defendants allege that at the time they were quoted said rate of , $1.25 by the plaintiff that there was a controversy and question as to whether or not the Boisd’arc and Southern Railway Company was a common carrier and if said railway road was not a common carrier the rate of $1.25 would have been correct.
“Now comes the defendants by way of set-off, counterclaim and reconvention, and respectfully show' that in the hauling and transporting the materials described in plaintiff’s petition and in Exhibit ‘A’ thereof, the plaintiff failed to deliver to the defendants four hundred and two tons of material described in plaintiff’s petition of the reasonable value of $940.02; that the plaintiff received the same from the North Texas Material Company for the defendants herein and the said materials were wholly within the custody and control of plaintiff herein and that defendants do not know how or where the said materials were lost nor from which of the cars described in plaintiff’s original petition the materials were-lost, but that plaintiff negligently failed to deliver the same to the defendants herein.”

To these allegations, plaintiff interposed: First, special exception to the allegations bearing on the defense of estoppel, in that, a railroad common carrier cannot be es-topped to charge and collect a true and lawful freight rate under the circumstances alleged; therefore, such pleading is not a legal defense to plaintiff’s suit for the collection of the rate applicable to the particular shipment here involved; and, second, to the pleadings directed to shortage of sand and gravel, in that, such allegations are too general; it is incumbent upon the defendants, in suits against a common carrier for loss of goods in transit, as against special exceptions, to allege and necessarily prove the identity of the railway car or cars, by numbers or otherwise, claimed to have been short in the particulars named.

The trial court sustained plaintiff’s contentions, and, on trial of the cause, the defendants having declined to amend, judgment was entered in favor of the Railroad Company against the defendants for the sum of $1,104.94. This appeal is directed to the action of the court in sustaining plaintiff’s demurrer to defendants’ defense [919]*919of estoppel, and to its cross-action, accordingly, entering judgment for the Railroad Company.

We think the trial court correctly sustained plaintiff’s demurrer to defendants’ defense of estoppel, because such allegations, in effect, circumvent the letter and spirit of the statute (art. 6474, R.S.1925), obviously designed to prohibit common carriers from charging, demanding, collecting or receiving preferential or advantageous charges for transportation.

Article 6474, supra, reads:

“Unjust discrimination is hereby prohibited and the following acts or either of them shall constitute unjust discrimination.
“1.

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Related

Texas & New Orleans Railroad Co. v. Yates
161 S.W.2d 1050 (Texas Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W.2d 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-texas-n-o-r-texapp-1940.