141 S.W. 155 | Tex. App. | 1911
In the third and fifth assignments of error exception is made to the charge of the court in submitting the issue of negligence as against the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company, on the ground that as against that company the evidence did not raise the issue, and we think the assignments must be sustained. The plaintiff, Jarmon, neither in person nor by agent, accompanied the cattle, and no act or omission of negligence on the part of the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Companies is pointed out or found by us in the record. It appears, perhaps, that appellee relies upon the fact, of which there was evidence tending to establish that when the cattle finally arrived at the stockyards in East St. Louis they were in a damaged condition. By agreement of the parties, however, it appears that the line of the terminal carrier, the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company, extends no farther than St. Louis, Mo., and the evidence entirely fails to show how or by what agency the cattle were transported from St. Louis, Mo., to East St. Louis, Ill., where they were delivered to the National Stockyards Company. Nor do we find in the record any contract on the part of the railway company last named by which it undertook to transport the cattle beyond the terminus of its own line, or any evidence that the agency of further transportation was one over which that company had any control. In this attitude of the proof the generally accepted rule that the burden of proof rests upon the last carrier to show that it was not guilty of negligence from which resulted the injuries has no application. See Martin v. K. C., M. O. Ry. Co. (No. 6,929) 139 S.W. 615, recently decided by this court.
Moreover, if additional reason be needed, it affirmatively appears in the evidence that at Fluvanna, Tex., at and before the beginning of the transportation, the cattle were subjected to treatment and injuries from which damages probably resulted, and that, when the cattle were delivered to the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company of *156 Texas at Ft. Worth, there were then one or more dead and injured cattle, and the presumption of negligence on the part of the terminal carrier materially rests upon proof that the cattle were delivered to the initial carrier in good condition. Appellee suggests that the court's charge restricted the jury in its findings for damages against the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway to such damages only as proximately resulted from its own negligence. But it by no means satisfactorily appears that the jury observed the restriction, inasmuch as under the court's instructions, in event they found for plaintiff, they were to find for him all damages against the initial carrier, which they presumably did, but in the same connection found against the appellants named for precisely the same sum, notwithstanding the evidence showing injury and damages by preceding carriers, including the Roscoe, Snyder Pacific Railway Company. Under the interstate commerce act of June 29, 1906, the Roscoe, Snyder Pacific Railway Company has the right of recovery over against other carriers in event only that it is able to prove that the damages, for which the plaintiff in the suit showed right of recovery, proximately resulted from the negligence of such other carriers. There being no legal evidence as against the present appellants tending to so show, we think, as before stated, that the court was in error in submitting the issue as complained of in the third and fifth assignments of error, and there was also error in failing to give appellants' special charge No. 1, set out in the fourth assignment of error, requiring the jury to so find.
The errors above indicated require a reversal of the judgment as against the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company of Texas and the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company. The Roscoe, Snyder Pacific Railway Company, however, has not appealed from the judgment in favor of plaintiff against it, nor from the judgment in favor of the Texas Pacific Railway Company, and therefore the judgment in favor of these parties will not be disturbed, but as against the appellant railway companies the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for trial upon the issues raised under the plea of the Roscoe, Snyder Pacific Railway Company over against the appellants.
The motion for rehearing is accordingly overruled.