88 S.W. 299 | Tex. App. | 1905
This action was brought by appellant against the appellee in the County Court of Bosque County to recover damages in the sum of $441.74 and interest, because of alleged negligent delay in the transportation and delivery of two carload lots of wool from Clifton, Texas, a station on appellee's railroad, to the city of New York. The trial resulted in a judgment for appellee, and we are asked to set it aside because the evidence is insufficient to support it.
The following facts are undisputed: that one of appellant's agents on the 19th day of October, 1900, delivered to appellee at Clifton, Texas, 22,087 pounds, or two carloads, of wool for transportation to New York. Some of the circumstances tend to show that the shipment was to be made via Galveston and the Mallory Steamship Line. It is certain that such was the route the shipment was made to take. The distance from Clifton to Galveston, Texas, by appellee's line of railway is 270 miles. At the time of this shipment the regular schedule of appellee's local freight trains between these points was 12 miles per hour, and the schedule time for its through freight trains was 15 miles per hour. Adopting the schedule time for local freight trains as a reasonable time, the wool should have arrived in Galveston about 10 o'clock a. m., October 20. The wool did not arrive there, however, until October 26. The wool was not actually unloaded upon the wharf of the transporting steamer of the Mallory line until about November 12, after which it seems to have been transported to New York in the usual time of such transportations by the steamship company and delivered in New York to appellant's commission agent on November 21, 1900.
The proof shows that from October 19, 1900, to November 14, 1900, the market value of the wool in question in New York City was 20 cents per pound. Thereafter there seems to have been a continuous decline in the market until after the delivery in New York as stated.
As presented to us the only controversy in the evidence is as to the time of the delivery by appellee at Galveston. The shipping contract provided that appellee's liability should "terminate on tender of delivery to a connecting carrier," and the contention of appellee and the theory upon which the case seems to have been tried is that a tender of delivery of the wool in question was made to the steamship line on October 26, 1900, and that had the Mallory line exercised due diligence in the further transportation, the wool would have arrived in New York prior to any decline of the market. If this be admitted, however, it does not follow that appellee should be relieved of liability. The earliest date that the evidence shows that there was a "tender of delivery," as insisted upon by appellee, was October 26, 1900. No explanation of the long delay from October 19 to October 26 appears, from which, hence, negligence on appellee's part may be inferred. It can not be said therefore *642
that this did not contribute with the negligence, if any, of the Mallory line, in bringing about the injury complained of. The precise question in principle has been before us in several cases. In the case of Texas Pacific Ry. Co. v. Smith White, 34 Texas Civ. App. 571[
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.