135 S.W. 162 | Tex. App. | 1911
This is an action by the Reynolds Cattle Company against the Pecos River Railroad Company, the Pecos Valley Northeastern Railroad Company, the Pecos Northern Texas Railroad Company, the Southern Kansas Railroad Company, the Atchison, Topeka Santa Fé Railroad Company, the Missouri Pacific Company, and the Chicago, Milwaukee St. Paul Railway Company, to recover damages for injuries to a shipment of horses from Pecos, Tex., to Malta, Mont., and for an overcharge of freights on the same shipment. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment against the Pecos River Railroad Company in the sum of $916.05 on an overcharge of freight; against the Pecos Valley Northeastern Railroad Company and the Atchison, Topeka Santa Fé Railway Company in the sum of $662.80, respectively, on account of negligence in handling the stock, and in favor of all the other defendants. The companies against whom judgment was rendered have appealed.
What is denominated "fundamental" error is first assigned. It is this: The act of the Thirty-First Legislature (Laws 1909, c.
The trial court instructed on the issue of overcharge in freights that if on the date of shipment certain tariff rates, which were shown to have been filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, were then on file at the station or with the agent of the Pecos River Railroad Company at Pecos, to find for the defendants. And conversely, to find for the plaintiff, if such rates were not on file with appellant Pecos River Railroad Company. This is complained of, because it is urged that the rates became effective immediately upon the filing of the tariff of rates with the Interstate Commerce Commission. We do not think so. Something more must be shown by a railroad company when it seeks to justify a rate, under a plea that such rate has been duly filed and promulgated under the federal acts. Section 6 of the act regulating interstate commerce (Act Feb. 4, 1887, c.
We do not think this holding in any manner conflicts with the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Texas P. Ry. Co. v. Cisco Oil Mill,
The special charges informing the jury, in effect, that if the defendants transported said horses on the first through train going in the direction of their destination, that this would be a compliance with their obligation under the law, could not be given, for at last this itself is a question of fact, conceding that appellants were held only to ordinary care in handling the stock. Besides, the matter seems to have been well presented in the court's charge.
The eighth special charge, informing the jury that the law presumed that the bad condition of the horses when delivered at their destination was caused by the last carrier handling them, was on the weight of the evidence and properly refused, since there was evidence tending to overcome this presumption (which is one of fact), and the jury should have been left free, as they were, to place the blame where it belonged.
The answer of the witness Reynolds to the question of time to make a shipment of less than a full train load from Pecos, Tex., to Atchison or Kansas City, Kan., was so indefinite as to be without prejudice to appellants.
The evidence, though not full, is yet sufficient to support the judgment for the full sum returned by the jury, We find no error in the judgment, and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.