Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. McKay

44 So. 780, 91 Miss. 138
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 So. 780 (Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. McKay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad v. McKay, 44 So. 780, 91 Miss. 138 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Whitfield, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case is controlled by the case of Yazoo, etc., R. R. Co. v. Blum, 89 Miss., 242, 42 South., 282. The pleas in this case set out substantially the same defense as set out in the case above, except that the pleas here are much fuller, amplifying the defense materially. There are four special pleas in the case. The first special plea is in the words and figures as follows :

And for a further plea defendant says that plaintiff ought [143]*143not to have and recover in this case, for this, to-wit: Defendant is a common carrier as set out in the second and third pleas. Its main line extends from the city of Memphis, in the state of Tennessee, to the city of New Orleans, in the state of Louisiana, traversing the states of Louisiána and Mississippi, and together with its main and branch lines it runs through a country in which cotton is the chief agricultural produce and one of the chief commodities to it for shipment. During the months of October, November, and December, 1904, it had full, ample, and complete equipment of cars and engines necessary to transport with promptness and dispatch all business ordinarily offered to it at that or any other season of the year, notwithstanding the fact that during the said months of October, November, and December, for the reason aforesaid, it required for transaction of the business ordinarily offered to it during said months far greater equipment of engines and cars than was needed or necessary for its business during the remainder of said year. Prior to the opening of the cotton season in September, 1904, the estimate which had been generally placed by the cotton merchants and planters upon the crops of the said year to be produced in the United States averaged less than eleven million bales, or about the same as the crop of previous years. The estimate placed upon it by the members of the Memphis Cotton Exchange, situated in the city of Memphis, Tenn. (where the general offices of the defendant company are located), in November, 1904, was eleven million, three hundred and fifty seven thousand, two hundred and twenty-two bales. The defendant company had provided itself with all necessary and needed cars, engines, and equipment for the handling of cotton, which would be offered to it ordinarily and under ordinary and usual crop conditions, for shipment at various points along its line with promptness and without delay.

By reason and on account of favorable crop conditions during the fall of 1904 the crop of cotton was unprecedented, not [144]*144only along the lines of the defendant company, but also through all the United States, and amounted to a total of thirteen million, five hundred and fifty six thousand, eight hundred and forty-one bales in the United States, as against ten million, one hundred and twenty-three thousand, six hundred and eighty-six bales for the previous year, and ten million, seven hundred and fifty-eight thousand, three hundred and twenty-six bales for the year preceding that, or the year 1902-03. Of this amount the crop for 1904-05 in the state of Mississippi was one million, seven hundred and seventy-seven thousand bales, in round numbers, as against one million, three hundred and eighty-seven thousand in 1903-04, and one million, four hundred thousand in 1902-03 against one million, three hundred and seventy-five thousand in 1901-02; while in Louisiana the crop for 1904-05 was one million, one hundred thousand as against eight hundred and twenty-four thousand bales in 1903-04, and eight hundred and eighty-four thousand bales in 1902-03 against eight hundred and eighty thousand bales in 1901-02; and the crop in Tennessee for the year 1904-05 amounted to six hundred and ninety-one thousand bales as against four hundred and fifty-one thousand for 1903 — 04, and five hundred and nine thousand for 1902-03, as against three hundred and fifty-nine thousand for 1901-02 — or an increase in the states above named, which are traversed by the defendant railroad company, of nine, hundred and six thousand bales for the year 1904-05 over 1903-04. The defendant company could not have foreseen nor anticipated any such record-breaking crop, and, had it been able to do so, it would not have been able to provide the necessary equipment nor secure the necessary labor to have moved with greater promptness than the cotton was handled by the defendant, for the reason that throughout the cotton section traversed by the defendant company, in order to harvest the said crop, there was such a demand for labor it was difficult to secure it at any price, and, had the defendant been able to furnish a sufficient number of cars, it' would have experi[145]*145enced. and did experience difficulty in securing labor to load the cotton upon the ears. In addition to this, in order to purchase equipment, because of the great era of prosperity than existing throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and especially on account of the great amount of freight then being offered to the various railroads in the United States, particularly to the railroads of the Southern States, and on account of the great demand for freight cars, which demand had existed for some years, and had resulted with placing with various manufacturers of freight cars more orders than could be filled without booking ahead, defendant would have been unable to secure more cars than it did secure without having had at least a year or more notice than the enormous cotton crop of 1904-05 would be delivered it for shipment along its line of road.

Defendant says that it did handle the said cotton delivered it by plaintiff and by all other shippers along its lines without discrimination against any shipper or any shipping point; that it provided a greater number of ears for the movement of the same than it had provided in any previous year to that, and, notwithstanding this fact, because of the said unusual heavy crop and the great demands made upon it during the months of October, November, and December, 1904, it was unable to handle and move the cotton tendered by plaintiff herein for shipment with greater dispatch than it did handle the same. Defendant avers that during the month of October, 1904, it had on its system per day one thousand, three hundred and sixty-eight foreign cars — that is, cars belonging to other railway systems than the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley system (not including cars of the Illinois Central) — as against one thousand, one hundred and eighty-four foreign cars in the year 1903, and one thousand, one hundred and thirty-nine for the same month in 1902; that during the month of November, 1904, it had foreign cars on its road averaging per day two thousand, three hundred and seventy-one, as against one thousand, three [146]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 So. 780, 91 Miss. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yazoo-mississippi-valley-railroad-v-mckay-miss-1907.