This suit was originally instituted in the Justice Court for precinct No. 1, Tarrant County, against the Fort Worth Denver City Railway Company and the Colorado Southern Railway Company, to recover damages for injuries to a car load of horses alleged to have occurred upon the lines of said roads, while being transported from Loveland, Colo., to Granbury, Texas. The car contained twenty-eight head of horses, and from Loveland was conveyed over the line of the Colorado Southern Railway Company to Texline, thence over the line of the Fort Worth Denver City Railway Company to Fort Worth, where it was delivered to the Fort Worth Rio Grande Railway Company, over whose line it was further conveyed to its final destination. The horses were shown to have been in good condition when they were delivered to the initial carrier, and were also shown to have been in a badly damaged condition when they were received by appellee at Granbury, some eight or ten days thereafter. Four days is shown to have been a reasonable time within which the horses should have made the trip.
The rule is that where freight has been transported by successive carriers and it is damaged en route, and the evidence fails to show on what particular line the injury occurred, the presumption of law is that the injury occurred upon the line of the last carrier through whose hands the freight passed. Texas P. Ry. Co. v. Adams,
It is doubtful if the circumstances in evidence are sufficient to support the verdict and judgment in appellee's favor, but a decision of that question becomes immaterial, since the judgment will be reversed and remanded for the error in the court's charge upon the burden of proof.
The doubt we have above indicated grows out of the meagerness of the testimony to show that the injuries to appellee's stock were not inflicted upon it while in the hands of the terminal carrier, this meagerness being due, for the most part, doubtless, to the fact that he did not accompany the shipment of his stock.
Reversed and remanded. *Page 293