237 S.W. 344 | Tex. App. | 1922
This is a suit against the St. Louis, Brownsville Mexico Railway Company and A. R. Ponder, receiver of the San Antonio, Uvalde Gulf Railway Company, by G. T. Freasier and I. J. Goynes, to recover damages to a shipment of two carloads of cattle from Mikeski, Live Oak county, Tex., to New Orleans, La. It was alleged that the cattle were fat, and were shipped to be sold on the market in New Orleans, and that it was requested by appellees that the cattle be routed over the two defendant lines to Houston, and from there on Southern Pacific lines to New Orleans, but were told that, if appellees would permit them to go over the Gulf Coast lines by way of De Quincey and Baton Rouge, La., they would arrive from 6 to 12 hours quicker in New Orleans than over the route desired by appellees; that the cattle were shipped as desired by appellants, and were roughly handled and negligently delayed all along the line from Houston to Baton Rouge, and at the last-named place were unreasonably delayed, and on the way from that place to New Orleans. Appellees claimed $997.62 as damages, and on a trial without a jury recovered nothing as against the receiver, and $700 as against the St. Louis, Brownsville Mexico Railway Company.
Two motions have been filed by appellees; one to dismiss the appeal for the reason that the brief was not filed in the lower court, and was not filed in this court until January 5, 1922, of which appellees received a copy on January 9, and a motion to strike out the statement of facts because of certain erasures and interlineations alleged to have been made after the same had been prepared, and approved by the county judge. This is a case involving very few and very simple points, the brief of appellants being only seven pages of typewritten matter, and appellees could have easily answered the brief in four or five days. They had nine days before submission in which to prepare their briefs, but failed to prepare and file them. They have not been injured by the failure to file a brief in the lower court or to file a brief in this court earlier than was done. This is a very different case from that of Railway v. Jefferson,
In regard to the statement of facts, the county judge swears that, since he ordered the same filed, matter has been erased on the bottom of page 6 and top of page 7. The matter alleged to have been erased were the reasons given by counsel for appellants for objecting to certain statements made by a commission man to one of the appellees. Counsel for appellants swears positively and unequivocally that the erasures were made before the statement of facts were filed by the judge. The matter erased is utterly immaterial in view of the fact that it is embodied in a bill of exceptions *346 signed by the county judge on the same date the statement of facts was filed. Both motions are overruled.
The first assignment of error is over-ruled. What appellees paid for the cattle in Live Oak county, Tex., could have no bearing upon the market value in New Orleans, and what might have been the damages incurred by appellees on account of the delay in shipment of the cattle. What objections were urged to the testimony is not disclosed by the bill of exceptions.
What the commission man in New Orleans told one of the appellees was very material, and was clearly hearsay. It will usually be presumed in a trial before a judge that he eliminated the improper evidence, and decided the cause upon the legal evidence, but it is clear, from the size of the judgment, and the scarcity of the evidence outside of the improper testimony to sustain the judgment, that the hearsay evidence found a lodgment in the mind of the judge and influenced his action. The evidence probably influenced the judgment of the county judge. In signing the bill of exceptions the court did not intimate that the illegal evidence was not considered by him, nor does he state in the matter erased from the statement of facts that he did not consider the testimony, but merely that "he would not consider anything that he had brought out that was not legitimate testimony." He evidently thought the objectionable evidence was "legal testimony," or he would not have admitted it.
The estimate made by Goynes as to the loss in weight of the cattle was evidently a wild guess, with no material basis, and should not have been allowed without the witness being required to give the grounds upon which he based his estimate. He was contradicted by Lacroix, an expert, who testified as to loss of weight. He was a witness for appellees.
Appellee Goynes should not have been permitted to testify as to how long it would have taken for the Southern Pacific Railway to carry the cattle from Houston to New Orleans, and such testimony was clearly inadmissible.
There is no complaint about the judgment in favor of A. R. Ponder, receiver.
The judgment is affirmed as to the receiver; in other respects reversed, and the cause remanded.