85 P. 412 | Kan. | 1906
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Fields & Slaughter Company obtained a judgment against Forrester Brothers, to satisfy which they garnisheed the Kansas City Southern Railway Company. It answered that' it was not indebted. Upon this answer the Fields & Slaughter Company took issue. The jury returned a verdict for the garnishee. Upon application of the plaintiffs the verdict was set aside and a new trial ordered. The garnishee prosecutes error to reverse this order.
There were no pleadings; consequently the conten-, tions of the parties can only be ascertained from the statements made by counsel and the questions which appear to have been tried. From these it appears that the Fields & Slaughter Company claimed that Forrester Brothers were engaged in buying and shipping corn and oats; that about September 27, 1901, the latter entered into a contract with certain railroads running from Omaha and Council Bluffs and other common northern points to Kansas City, called the northern connecting lines, and the Kansas City Southern
The Kansas City Southern denied that it had ever made a contract with Forrester Brothers, or any one representing them, for the shipment of corn and oats from Kansas City to Shreveport or other common points at eight cents; but claimed that during the months of September and October, 1901, it had declared and published a rate of ten cents per hundred pounds on corn and oats from Kansas City to Shreveport, Texarkana, and other common southern points; that this rate had been filed with the interstate commerce commission at Washington, as required by the interstate commerce act, and was in force until October 31, about which time it changed its schedule and advanced the rate to fourteen cents, which rate was also published, and filed with the interstate commerce commission; that if any contract existed by which Forrester Brothers were to receive a special rate lower
It was also contended by the garnishee that the contract relied upon by the plaintiffs as a basis for its liability to Forrester Brothers was so indefinite and uncertain, both as to the quantity of grain to be shipped and the time within which it should be actually shipped, that it was non-enforceable; and also that the alleged contract, if made as claimed by plaintiffs, would be void for want of mutuality, in that Forrester Brothers did not agree to ship any grain over its line, and were not bound so to do. Another contention by the •garnishee was that Forrester Brothers paid the rates charged without protest, complaint, or objection, and therefore that the payment was voluntary. All of these facts were passed upon by the jury, and they found for the garnishee. Upon a motion for a new trial the court was required to review all of the evidence produced on the trial tending to establish or refute these disputed facts.
We are not informed upon what grounds the court
It was said in the syllabus of the case of City of Sedan v. Church, 29 Kan. 190:
“The supreme court will not reverse the order of the trial court granting a new trial unless the supreme, court can see beyond all reasonable doubt that the trial court has manifestly and materially erred with respect to some pure, simple and unmixed question of law, and that except for such error the ruling of the trial court would not have been made as it was made, and that it ought not to have been so made.”
The judgment is affirmed.