The appellee, C. T. Word, sued the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company, together with the appellants, the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Railway Company, the Southern Kansas Railway Company of Texas, and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, for damages to three shipments of cattle. On April Í6, 1910, C. T. AVord delivered to the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company, at Simmons, Tex., for shipment to Summit, Kan., 1,971 head of cattle to be transported over the lines of the above-named companies. These were shipped in two trains; the first shipment consisting of 35 cars and the second shipment containing 27 cars. On the 30th day of April, 1910, appellee delivered to the Ft Worth & Denver City Railway Company, at Simmons, Tex., for transportation, 67 head of cattle, two cars, over the lines of the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company and the appellants in this case to Summit, Kan. Unreasonable delay en route, rough handling, etc., is alleged, and consequent injury to the cattle and damage therefrom.
The Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company answered by general and special plea, and among other things pleaded the terms of the shipping contract, limiting its liability to loss or injury occurring on its own line of road. The Atchison, Topeka & Sante Fé Railway Company and the Southern Kansas Railway Company of Texas answered jointly, generally, and specially, and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company also answered generally and specially. The respective pleas of the parties will be stated more in detail in discussing the several assignments. Judgment based upon the verdict of the jury trying the cause was rendered for appellee Word against the Atchi-son, Topeka & Santa Fé Railway Company for $1,329, against the Southern Kansas Railway Company of Texas for $771.45, and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company for $2,185.60; no damages were assessed against the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company. The case appears to have been tried in the court below upon the theory that it was governed alone by the statutes and decisions of this state and the briefs of the respective parties so treat the case, but by supplemental citation of authorities counsel for the Santa Fé roads call attention to the fact that this case is controlled by the interstate commerce .act.
The first, second,' third, fourth, fifth, and sixth assignments relate to pleadings and contracts of shipment of the two roads, the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé and the Southern Kansas Railway Company of Texas, designated by us for brevity as the Santa Fé, setting up and pleading certain clauses of the shipping contract with reference to notice of claims for damages as a condition precedent to the right of recovery. The contracts so set up are those executed by the Santa Fé. The fourth paragraph (a, b, and c) of the Santa Fé’s answer is as follows:
“(a) That the liability of each carrier should be and was limited to its own acts and lines, and terminated upon its delivery or upon tendering delivery to its succeeding connecting carrier, and that such defendant was in no wise to be held liable for any loss or damage occurring off its line of railway; that these defendants received said cattle at Amarillo, Tex., and transported the same over their lines of road to Wichita, Kan., at which place their connection with said shipments ceased; that they transported and handled said stock with reasonable care and dispatch, and no damages or injuries whatever occurred to said stock while on their line of road or while in their charge.
"(b) That defendants further stipulated and provided in said shipping contracts, under terms of which said stock was transported by these defendants, that the plaintiff should load, unload, and reload said stock, and look after and care for same while in transit; that, if plaintiff’s said cattle sustained any damages as alleged in his petition, such damages resulted from plaintiff’s failure to properly load, unload, and reload said stock and properly look after and care for same while in transit, and his failure to properly load, unload, and reload and look after and care for said cattle while in transit, as provided for in said shipping contracts, and plaintiff’s own negligence in these respects and in these particulars became and was the direct and proximate cause of any and all such damages as he may have sustained.
“(c) That no claim for damages to said cattle should be recoverable, unless written claim therefor should be presented to the defendant carrier within 91 days after .such damages occurred. Defendants would represent that no claim in writing claiming damages to said several shipments of cattle, as sued for'in plaintiff’s petition, was within the 91 days after such damage had occurred ever in fact presented to these defendants, or to either of them, as required under the terms of said written contract. And defendants plead said shipping contract in bar of plaintiff’s right to recover herein.”
The appellee, Word, replied to said answer as follows:
“And for further answer herein, plaintiff *378 says that his cattle were shipped on a through rate, billed from Simmons, Tex., to Summit, Kan., the freight being paid in advance to the initial carrier, the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company. That thereupon all defendants were bound to transport •said cattle without further contract. That said contracts were executed after said cattle were loaded and had been transported •over a portion of their journey and were without further or additional consideration. That said contracts were printed in such small type that it is very difficult for an •ordinary person to read them and of such great length that it would require great delay in transportation for the parties who executed such contracts to take the time to read over and understand such contracts. That they contain many illegal and void provisions, and in particular the provisions referred to in said contracts in paragraph c of subdivision 4 are so intermingled with and •dependent upon other provisions contained in said contract, which are illegal and void, that the same cannot be separated from said void and illegal provisions. That said contracts are so printed in such small type, at such great length, and intermingled with said void and illegal provisions for the fraudulent purpose on the part of the defendants of entrapping, confusing, and misleading persons to whom said contracts were presented for signature and for the purpose of preventing a reading thereof on the part of the shippers and an understanding on their part of .such provisions, if the same should be read. That the plaintiff did not read said contracts •before signing same and did not know that such contracts contained the provision set forth in said paragraph of said answer. That under the law the initial carrier in such a shipment, to wit, the Ft. Worth & Denver •City Railway Company, would be responsible to the plaintiff for the entire damages .sustained in the course of such transportation. That the plaintiff within due time presented notice of his said claim to said defendants, and that the provision in said ■contracts with the othei defendants, requiring the presentation of notice to them, was unreasonable and void.”
The contracts entered into by the appellee with the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company were all of the same form and were alike, except as to dates, numbers of •cars, cattle, etc., and in part are as follows:
“Live Stock Contract.
“Executed at Simmons station, 4/16/1910. This agreement made between the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company of the first •part, herein called the carrier, and C. T. Word, of the second part, herein called the •shipped, Witnesseth: That, for the consideration and the mutual covenants and conditions herein contained, the said carrier acknowledges receipt at Simmons and agrees ■•to transport for the shipper the live stock! described below, together with the parties in charge thereof, as hereinafter provided, viz.": 27 cars, said to contain 875 head of cattle from Simmons station to Summit, Kansas, consigned to C. T. Word, Summit, Kansas” —giving the number of cars, initials, number of cattle, etc. It is further provided in case the cattle were to be transported over the roads of any other railway company that the carrier should be released from liability of every kind after said stock shall have left its road, and that its liability should be limited to its own line of railway. This is substantially all of the Denver Railway Company’s contract, as set out in the record.
The contract set up by the Santa Fé occupies some 17 pages of the record, but the clause set out and upon which stress is laid by said Santa Fé is No. 8, and is as follows:
“Eighth. In order that any loss or damage to be claimed by the shipper may be fully and fairly investigated and the fact and nature of such claim or loss preserved beyond dispute and by the best evidence, it is agreed that as a condition precedent to his right to recover any damages for any loss or injury to his said stock during the transportation thereof, or at any place or places where the same may be loaded or unloaded for any purpose on the company’s road, or previous to loading thereof for shipment, the shipper or his agent in charge of the stock will give notice in writing of his claim therefor to some officer of said company, or to the nearest station agent, or, if delivered to consignee at a point beyond the company’s road, to the nearest station agent of the last carrier making such delivery before such stock shall have been removed from the place of destination above mentioned,! or from the place of delivery of the same to the consignee, and before such stock shall have been slaughtered or intermingled with other stock, and will not move such stock from said station or stock yards until the expiration of three hours after the giving of such notice; and a failure to comply in every respect with the terms of this clause shall be a complete bar to any recovery of any and all such damages. The written notice herein provided for cannot and shall not be waived by any person except a general officer of the company, and he only in writing. Nor shall any such damage be recoverable unless written claim therefor shall be presented to the company within 91 days after the same may have occurred.”
The testimony shows that all the freight money was paid on the three shipments to the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company from Simmons, Tex., to Summit, Kan., and the bills of lading were issued by that road to Summit, Kan., from Simmons. The cattle were transported by the Denver from Simmons to Amarillo, at which point they were delivered to the Santa Fé, which road transported them from Amarillo, Tex., to *379 Wichita, Kan. The Santa Fg delivered the cattle to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company at Wichita, Kan., which latter road completed the voyage to Summit, Kan.; the entire distance from Simmons to Summit being about 402 miles. The appellee testified he signed the contract of the Santa Fg at Amarillo upon the delivery of the cattle at that point to the Santa F'g Railway; that he did not read it but that he expected to sign it when he went to the Santa Fg yards. The contract looked to him about like all of them and he thought it about the usual one. He stated he had never read one of the contracts and that it was with difficulty he could read the fine print; that he signed it up as a pass and did not know that it contained the stipulation requiring notice to be given of the damage within 91 days.
The assignments from 1 to 6, inclusive, complain of the court’s charge in submitting to the jury the reasonableness of the stipulation contained in the contract, refusal of certain requested special charges, and with reference to the admission of certain testimony. We have concluded it is not necessary to set out the charge of the court or to give the requested instructions. The contention of appellee in reply to appellant is that under the statutes of this state (article 3379, Sayles’ Statutes) and the decisions of the courts of this state it was proper for the court to submit to the jury the question of whether or not the stipulation requiring notice was reasonable. Appellee cites us to Railway Co. v. Greathouse,
*380
By the Carmack amendment to the interstate commerce act, “the initial carrier is liable to the lawful holder thereof [the receipt or bill of lading] for any loss, damage or injury to such property, caused by it.” Mr. Justice Lurton said, in the case of Atlanta C. L. R. Co. v. Riverside Mills,
If the Ft. Worth & Denver Railway Company was a principal in making the contract for the through shipment and received the consideration therefor, the act of the Santa F§ procuring a contract for such shipment over the same route, was, as we think, without consideration and contrary to law. It was but the agent of the Denver Road and under the law was charged with the duty of carrying out the contract of its principal, with no right or power to ingraft new conditions and stipulations on the contract already lawfully executed, binding it fully to perform its part of the contract of carriage under the terms of said contract. # Stipulations in the contract of the initial carrier were ineffectual in so far as not authorized by the interstate commerce act, whether for its benefit or that of the intermediate carrier. Any provision valid in the initial carrier’s contract for its own benefit will therefore inure to the benefit of the connecting carrier. Kansas City S. R. Co. v. Carl,
It will be see'n from the above authorities that the contract of the initial carrier is one fixing the liability of the parties executing the contract, as well as that of the connecting carrier. It follows that any contract made, or attempted to be made, by the intermediate carrier has no binding effect with reference to the shipment while, in the course of transportation. The case of Railway Co. v. Carl, supra, appears to be authority for the shipper to sue the intermediate carrier direct. Railway Co. v. Ray,
We therefore conclude that the provision pleaded by the Santa Fé, as part of the contract executed by it, was no part of the contract for the transportation of the cattle from Simmons, Tex., to Summit, Kan., executed and delivered by the Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Company to the appel-lee, Word, and therefore the error committed by the trial court in its charge or in refusing the requested instructions and in the admission of the testimony, with reference *381 to matters relating to the contract, are harmless, and no such injury resulted to the appellants as will require a reversal of the case. The assignments from 1 to 6, inclusive, are therefore overruled.
Appellant Santa Fé asserts that the evidence shows that when the cattle were delivered to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company at Wichita, Kan., that the cattle had only been on the cars 28 hours and 40 minutes, and that th'e shipper in charge of the train requested that the time be extended to 36 hours. There is testimony in the record from which the jury could have found that the customary time for making the trip with the shipment of cattle was from Simmons, Tex.,' to Summit, Kan., from 24 to 30 hours, and that the usual and ordinary rate of speed for the transportation of cattle trains was from 14 to 18 miles per hour. The jury had testimony which would have warranted them in finding that the Santa Fé on the last division ran only about 12 miles per hour and on the division next to the last only about 13 miles per hour, and that the cattle were held by it at Wichita nearly two hours before they were delivered to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. We think there was sufficient evidence of slow time in running and delays en route from which the jury could have found that the Santa Fé was negligent and that such negligent delay proximately contributed to holding the cattle on board the cars without feed or water beyond the required time.
All the cattle were shipped to Summit for pasturage and were all held there until July, 1910, and a part of them until October, 1910. There is much testimony in the record as to the condition qf the cattle upon their arrival at Summit, as well as opinion testimony as to the time it would take for them to recover, as well as some testimony as to how the cattle prospered while in the pasture at that place. If it was proper for the court to charge on the question at all, we think the court’s charge substantially submitted the proposition as requested by appellant. The charge of the court, we think, is substantially correct in presenting the measure of damages. Railway Co. v. Word,
There is no allegation that it notified the appellee, Word, or the shipper in charge of the cattle of the congested condition with reference to the traffic at the time it received and accepted the cattle for shipment. There is testimony which suggests that, at the time the cattle in question were handled' by the Missouri Pacific Railway Company over its line of road, there was an unusual heavy shipment of cattle to the pasture grounds in the Flint I-Iill country in Kansas, to which point the cattle in question were consigned. The evidence indicates that there were unusual delays while the cattle were en route from Wichita, Kan., to Summit on account of the number of cattle trains being unloaded at various points, engines and trains passing for water and the like, from, which a jury could have inferred that there was an unusual shipment of cattle at that time. Some of the witnesses state they had no previous notice of the shipment of' cattle in question. One witness states, how *383 ever, that they had from 6 to 12 hours notice before the arrival of the cattle at Wichita, Kan. There is nothing in the record which shows that appellant or that any of the connecting carriers at the beginning of the voyage, during its continuance or at Wichita, Kan., or anywhere, notified appellee or his shippers or employés that there was any congestion or an unusual heavy trafile. They each and all accepted such cattle for transportation in the usual and ordinary way, without giving such notice. Under the pleadings and evidence, the trial court instructed the jury to disregard the plefi. of appellant, setting up the unusual condition with reference to the traffic.
Appellant requested the following special charge: “You are instructed that, if you find and believe from the evidence that such congestion arose and existed as pleaded by said defendant as above set out, then said defendant would not be liable for and you cannot find against it for any damages resulting to the plaintiff’s cattle from delay or delays due solely to said congestion. If you do not find and believe from the evidence that such congestion arose and existed as pleaded by the defendant, then the same would not be a defense to such damages, if any, to the plaintiff’s cattle as you may find proximately resulted from' negligence, if any, on its part, in causing or permitting such delays.” The foregoing portion of this charge is subject, however, to the following proviso: “If, before or at the time of accepting the plaintiff’s cattle, said congestion had arisen or was arising, and such fact was known to said defendant or by the exercise of ordinary care on its part could have been anticipated, and it was known by it or by the exercise of ordinary care, it would have reasonably anticipated said cattle would be delayed in their transportation from Wichita to Summit by reason of its inability on account of such congested condition to transport them within the usual time, then, in order for such congestion to be a defense to damages resulting from delays caused thereby, said defendant must allege and prove that it notified the plaintiff or his authorized representative or person in charge of the cattle, in tendering them to the defendant for shipment, of said congestion or anticipated congestion and consequent liability of the occurrence of such delay or delays. Said notice would not be necessary to said defense if said congestion arose subsequent to the time said cattle were accepted, or if the defendant before or at the time of accepting the said cattle did not know, and by the exercise of ordinary care would not have known, that such congestion had arisen or was arising or would arise, and that the same would render it unable to transport plaintiff’s cattle in the usual time required for such transportation.” This charge was refused by the trial court.
Assignments from 1 to 5, inclusive, will be considered together. The appellant, upon accepting the cattle, undertook to transport them with reasonable dispatch to their destination, and if, when it accepted them, it had knowledge of the condition of the heavy shipments at that time, it was made its duty to notify the shipper of such condition, which would likely cause extraordinary delay so that he might determine for himself whether he would take the risk of the delay. When the delay occurs out of the usual and ordinary, which the carrier seeks to excuse by showing the existence of unusual conditions, it assumes the burden and must by its pleading and its evidence show the very fact to the validity of its excuse. Appellant alleged that there unexpectedly developed a serious congestion of traffic on the 17th and 18th, and that it did not know of such impending rush. Whether this rush was on or before or after the arrival of the cattle at Wichita and after their acceptance by appellant, the pleadings are not clear on that point. The evidence, we think, in conclusive that the cattle were accepted and were started on appellant’s road; but, on account of the fact that trains were being unloaded on its line of road, the appellee’s cattle were held on the track for several hours longer than necessary. The conductors state that they were laid out on account of engines running for water, passing passengers trains, and by reason of the unloading of other trains ahead of them. We do not believe a jury would be warranted in finding that appellant did not know, or could not have known by ordinary diligence, that appellant had trains of cattle on its line of road to be unloaded at points, which would interfere with the movement of appellee’s cattle. Certainly appellant was charged with knowledge of the trains and shipments on its own line of road. These shipments clearly appear to have been on the road when it received the. cattle. If it had refused to accept the cattle, or if it had notified the shipper or its connecting carriers of the then unusual condition on its line of road, such condition might have been an excuse for the delay. The question would have been different if appellant had refused to accept the cattle. The plea under such condition might have presented a good defense. M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Stark Grain Co.,
The eighth and ninth assignments are overruled for the reason given in disposing of the Santa Fé’s tenth assignment.
The twelfth assignment is overruled for the reasons given in considering this appellant’s first to fifth assignments, inclusive.
We do not think there is reversible error shown, such as will require a reversal of the case, and we therefore affirm it.
Affirmed.
