Kansas City, M. & O. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Beckham

152 S.W. 228 | Tex. App. | 1912

The Kansas City, Mexico Orient Railway Company of Texas prosecutes this writ of error from a judgment of the county court of Nolan county against it in favor of C. T. Beckham for the sum of $115 for damages growing out of a shipment of live stock from Trent to Amarillo. The facts show that the shipment moved from Trent to Sweetwater by way of the Texas Pacific Railway Company, from Sweetwater to Chillicothe over the line of the plaintiff in error, and from Chillicothe to destination over the Ft. Worth Denver City Railway. The judgment of the county court must be reversed for errors in rulings on evidence.

The court permitted the witness Hearndon to answer the following question: "From your experience and in the shipment of cattle and stock over the several roads in this country and over this Orient road, do you know what would be about a reasonable time to transport a car of stock, say about 150 miles over the Orient road?" It was objected to this that the answer would invade the province of the jury and call for an opinion of the witness on a mixed question of law and fact This objection should have been sustained. We recently had occasion to review a very similar ruling in the case of K. C., M. O. Ry. Co. v. Bigham, 138 S.W. 432, in which we followed the rule announced by our Supreme Court in H. T. C. Ry. Co. v. Roberts, 101 Tex. 418, 108 S.W. 808. It is now generally understood to be improper to allow a witness to state what would or would not be a reasonable time when the very purpose of the inquiry is to determine the reasonableness of the given time. Whether in any case the time consumed in making a shipment of cattle is reasonable or not depends upon a variety of circumstances, among which is whether or not the carrier exercised ordinary care. This under all the decisions is a matter to be decided by the jury and is not the subject of expert testimony. A number of similar rulings were made, but it is unnecessary to notice separately each of them,

Plaintiff in error offered to prove by the witness McKnight that it was "usual, customary, and ordinary that, in the transportation of a car load of young mules several hundred miles over different railroads, some of them will be skinned somewhat by knocking or bumping against the sides of the car as a natural incident to the trip and as a natural result of the vitality of the mules." The court sustained the objection that such testimony called for an opinion. This may be true, but the record abundantly shows that the witness was competent to express an opinion. He says: "I have been familiar with the horse and mule business and in that business for the past 20 years in buying and selling this kind of stock. My experience has been sufficient to make me thoroughly acquainted with the condition of stock after having been shipped, as I have been shipping and feeding and observing stock for the last several years." The excluded evidence should have been admitted upon the issue developed by the pleadings that the injuries received were only those ordinarily incidental to a shipment of such stock. F. W. D.C. Ry. Co. v. Greathouse,82 Tex. 104, 17 S.W. 834.

The following ruling was also erroneous. The witness McKnight was asked by counsel for plaintiff in error to state whether or not in his opinion, if these mules had been placed in a proper pasture suitable for them after their arrival at Amarillo, would they have entirely recovered within a *230 few weeks from all apparently injurious effects of the trip? To this counsel for defendant in error objected because the question was hypothetical and called for an opinion not based on facts in the case. As before stated, this witness was qualified to testify as an expert and testified that he saw the mules in question when unloaded at Amarillo. Now one of the material inquiries on the trial undoubtedly was the extent of the injuries received by the mules. Defendant in error's contention was that, by reason of plaintiff in error's negligence, the mules were beaten and bruised, made lame and sick, and otherwise seriously injured to the extent of $15 per head, while the plaintiff in error insisted that they received only such injuries as were ordinarily incident to the journey. Under these circumstances it was proper for a witness possessed of the requisite knowledge to testify as to the length of time it would take the animals to recover, if at all, under proper treatment. Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. v. Word, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 206, 111 S.W. 753; M., K. T. Ry. Co. v. Rich, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 312, 112 S.W. 115. In the nature of things the extent of such injuries is largely a matter of opinion at best, and we can hardly conceive of more satisfactory opinion evidence than that of the character excluded. The purpose of such testimony as pointed out in the authorities cited is not to vary the rule for measuring damage at all, but rather to determine the real extent of the injuries at the time the animals reached their destination. A number of similar rulings were made, but will not be separately discussed. The witnesses should have been permitted to testify that the injuries received did not materially affect the growth of the mules or their selling price on the market, and that with proper care they would quickly have recuperated.

The failure of the court to set forth in his charge the various issues involved could hardly avail plaintiff in error anything in the absence of a request for the submission of such issues, and the rulings on exceptions complained of in the first and second assignments could not have been harmful in view of the manner in which the issues were submitted.

The vital question was whether or not plaintiff in error exercised ordinary care in receiving and transporting defendant in error's stock upon their arrival at Sweetwater, and the charge properly submitted this question. It is no defense that plaintiff in error transported the stock on its first schedule train after their arrival in Sweetwater, if in doing so it was guilty of negligence.

On the other hand, it was immaterial that defendant in error was ignorant of plaintiff in error's schedules governing the movement of stock trains.

The twentieth assignment is overruled wherein the proposition is asserted that the railway company, not being required to provide watering facilities in the pens, but only being required to exercise reasonable care to provide reasonably efficient facilities for watering plaintiff's mules, the charge precluded the jury from fully determining this issue. This rule of care undoubtedly governs carriers of live stock in many respects, but, as regards the duty to feed and water, the statute has prescribed a different one. Article 714, Revised Statutes 1911, makes it the duty of a common carrier who conveys live stock of any kind to feed and water the same during the time of conveyance and until the same is delivered to the consignee, unless otherwise provided by special contract. I. G. N. Ry. Co. v. McRae, 82 Tex. 614, 18 S.W. 672, 27 Am. St. Rep. 926.

Plaintiff in error requested a number of special charges upon a phase of the case already discussed; that is, whether or not it exercised ordinary care in transporting the cattle on its first schedule train to leave Sweetwater after their arrival, one of which was given. It cannot then complain that the others were not given. It would be improper to give all, and, by submitting all to the court, it in effect invited the court to elect which charge it would give on that particular issue, and, having thus elected, plaintiff in error will not be heard to complain.

There is nothing contained in the statement under the twenty-third assignment of error which would indicate that plaintiff In error's rights were materially affected by the court's refusal to give special charge No. 4 concerning the written contract of shipment pleaded by it. In short, there is nothing in the brief to show that the liability of the company was not precisely the same both with and without the written contract. The court's charge on the burden of proof was in the usual form and was sufficient. The requested charges upon this issue would have been improper.

Special charge No. 3 to the effect that, where live stock have been transported by several successive carriers and are shown on arrival at destination to have been injured en route, there is a presumption in law that such injuries occurred on the line of the last carrier handling the stock, if the law in any case, is not applicable in the present instance. There may be under such circumstances a presumption of fact to that effect where there is no evidence as to where the injuries occurred, but in the present case there is much evidence tending to show that plaintiff in error's negligence produced the injuries. The charge, therefore, was inapplicable and would have been erroneous if given.

We have considered defendant in error's suggestion that the undisputed evidence shows that plaintiff in error was guilty of much delay in handling this shipment, and *231 that the cause should therefore be affirmed, irrespective of the errors of the court herein discussed and rule 62a (149 S.W. x), recently promulgated by the Supreme Court, is invoked for such affirmance. But, if the rule is to govern, yet we are inclined to think that the rulings did materially affect plaintiff in error's rights and that they not only were calculated to, but probably did, cause the rendition of an improper judgment in this case.

For the errors discussed, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

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