172 S.W. 763 | Tex. App. | 1915
Appellee made an oral contract with appellant for the shipment of the cattle from Pearland, Tex., to Foraker, Okla. When the parol contract was made, a written contract was not mentioned; nor was it mentioned until the train was about to start. Appellee was not given an opportunity to read the contract. He did not know of any of the conditions or provisions in the contract. While signing the contract, the conductor was urging appellee to come and get on the train. Appellee was so hurried that he left his overcoat, and the train was moving when he boarded it. Appellee did not know that the paper he signed was a contract. All the papers signed by appellee were signed just as the train began to move, and he was ignorant of their contents.
Contracts signed under similar circumstances to those hereinbefore stated have several times been declared null and void by the courts of Texas. Railway v. Meadors,
If the written contract was not assented to by appellee, and his name thereto was procured by fraud, as the facts indicate, then it was not his contract, and could not be binding upon him. We cannot imagine the most exalted court in the land holding that a party will be bound by the terms of a shipping contract of whose contents he was ignorant, and with which he was not given time to acquaint himself, and yet that is the effect of the contention of appellant. We shall review the later decisions of the federal Supreme Court cited by appellant, and endeavor to show that there is no material conflict between them and the Texas cases herein cited.
In the case of Adams Express Co. v. Croninger,
Strong reliance, however, is placed by appellant on the case of Railway v. Robinson,
"We regard these cases as settling the proposition that the shipper, as well as the carrier, is bound to take notice of the filed tariff rates, and that so long as they remain operative they are conclusive as to the rights of the parties, in the absence of facts or circumstances showing an attempt at rebating or false billing. * * * To give to the oral agreement upon which the suit was brought, the prevailing effect allowed in this case by the charge in the trial court, affirmed by the judgment of the Supreme Court of the state, would be to allow a special contract to have binding force and effect, though made in violation of the filed schedules, which were to be equally observed by the shipper and carrier. If oral agreements of this character can be sustained then the door is open to all manner of special contracts, departing from the schedules and rates filed with the Commission."
The opinion does not condemn all oral contracts, or all special contracts, but only those in conflict with "the schedules and rates published by the Commission." The opinion in the Sparks Case is not in conflict with the opinion in the Robinson Case, unless it be as to the measure of damages, which the Supreme Court holds is fixed by the schedules and rates filed with and published by the Interstate Commission.
While the trial court followed the case of Railway v. Sparks, and did not limit the recovery to the amount named in the schedule of rates, in instructing as to the measure of damages, appellant made no effort to have the damages confined to the amount named in the schedule of rates, and the jury found for a less sum than that allowed by the measure of damages fixed by the schedule of rates. The whole attack of appellant on the charge of the court is based on the validity of the written contract. The special charges requested by appellant are all based on the written contract, and the schedule of rates and tariffs is not mentioned in them, and the schedule is not mentioned in the assignments of error, except in connection with the written contract. The case was tried upon the theory that the liability of the appellant was fixed and controlled by the written contract, and the schedule of rates was mentioned only as a mere incident to that contract. This conclusively appears from the proposition under the twelfth assignment of error, which assails that part of the charge fixing the measure of damages. That proposition is:
"If plaintiff was entitled to recover, then his recovery is limited by the terms and conditions of the bill of lading under which the shipment moved; and it was the duty of the court in submitting this issue to only submit the same as had been provided in the contract."
The same matter is kept in view in the thirteenth assignment of error, and in the fourteenth assignment of error the special charge set out does not require the jury to fix the damages as set out in the schedule of rates, but to absolutely find for appellant if the shipment was made on that schedule.
However incorrect the measure of damages may have been as given in the charge of the court, still if the verdict of the jury did not exceed the damages which were sanctioned and permitted by the schedule of rates published by the Interstate Commerce Commission, appellant cannot complain, because it has suffered no injury from such error. The evidence showed without contradiction that appellee paid the freight rate of $69 per car, which was predicated upon a valuation for each animal shipped, not to exceed $50, and the highest valuation put upon the steers that were killed was $40 a head, and the highest damages to the cattle which were injured was $5 a head. The 21 cattle, at $40 a head, would be $840, and at $5 a head for the 841 cattle that were injured the damages would be $4,205; but the jury allowed only $1,261.50 for the injured cattle, if full proved value was allowed for the dead cattle. We cannot presume that the jury found the dead cattle to be worth more than the value that was proved, and, no matter what the true measure of damages may have been, appellant was not injured by the verdict.
While in the Robinson Case there is no direct holding that, in the absence of a written contract, the schedule of rates published by the Interstate Commerce Commission shall control as to the measure of damages, that holding may be reasonably inferred from the language of the decision herein quoted. For if an oral contract is only condemned because in conflict with the schedule, it might be inferred that if in harmony *766 with the schedule it would be sustained. If this be a reasonable inference, it is certainly not based on the Carmack amendment, nor on the language of the schedule published by the Commission. In that schedule it is provided:
"The rates in this tariff apply on shipments of ordinary live stock, where contracts are executed by shippers on blanks furnished by the railroads, and are based on the declared valuation by shippers at the time contract is signed. * * *"
If there was no written contract executed, as the facts show there was not in this case, then there is nothing upon which to base the valuation of animals to form a measure of the damages. No such contract as that insisted upon by appellant, and which has probably been approved by the federal Supreme Court, could ever have been dreamed of by Senator Carmack when he drew the bill requiring the initial carrier in interstate shipments to issue a receipt or bill of lading to the shipper, and provided that such carrier should be liable "to the lawful holder thereof for any loss, damage or injury to such property caused by it or by any common carrier" into whose hands it might come during its transportation. From being, as was intended by the statute, a measure of protection to the shipper, the law has become a shield and fortress for the railways of the country, by judicial interpretation. Those decisions of the federal Supreme Court, however distasteful they may be to state courts, must perforce be followed, as we have sought to follow them in this opinion. The federal statute was designed to give to the shipper the full amount of the loss inflicted upon his property by the carrier, and not such loss as might be fixed by the Interstate Commerce Commission, or by the ingenious and complicated contract drawn by a railway company. But it is so written by the court of last resort, and must be followed until further legislation shall grant relief.
The judgment is affirmed.