103 S.W. 1176 | Tex. App. | 1907
This suit was instituted by appellee against the Texas Pacific Railway Company, the St. Louis, Iron Mountain Southern Railway Company, the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company, and the Louisville Nashville Railway Company, to recover damages to thirty-three head of horses and mules shipped by him over the lines of railway of the defendant companies from Merkel, Texas, to Talladega, Alabama. The trial resulted in a judgment for appellee against the appellant company for two hundred dollars, against the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company for one hundred dollars, against the Louisville Nashville Railway Company for one hundred dollars, and in favor of the Texas Pacific Railway Company. Appellant alone appeals.
We conclude that the judgment must be reversed because of error, as assigned, in the court's charge on the measure of damages. The charge on this subject is as follows: "If you should find for the plaintiff against all or either of the defendants, you will be governed by the following rule in arriving at your verdict: You will first find from the evidence the reasonable value of said stock in the market at Talladega, Ala., at the time they should have reached there without reference to any injury or damage sustained by said stock, if any. You will then find from the evidence the reasonable value of said stock in the market at Talladega at the time of their arrival in their damaged and injured condition, if you should find from the evidence they were injured and damaged in value, and if this last amount is less than the amount found under the preceding subdivision of this charge, this difference, if any, will be the amount of your verdict for the plaintiff."
It is plain that this charge required the jury to assess against the defendants damages for the depreciation and injury to appellee's horses and mules not occasioned by negligence. As shown in the testimony, some injury or depreciation in live stock is naturally and necessarily caused by long shipments, even when the carriers exercise due care and diligence in the transportation. For such injury or damages not occasioned by the carrier's negligence no recovery can be had. St. Louis S.W. Ry. v. Smith, 77 S.W. Rep., 28. Appellee seems to concede the error, but insists that it was cured by special charge number three requested by the appellant and given by the court. This special instruction, however, as we construe it, goes only to the issue of liability and not to the measure of damages. It was to the effect merely that before appellee would be entitled to damages in "any amount" the jury must find that his live stock had been injured or damaged "more than such a shipment would ordinarily be damaged as a result of being shipped from Merkel to Talladega."
There is yet another objection to the charge of the court we have quoted that requires notice. The evidence shows that appellant's line of railway is operated only from Texarkana, Arkansas, to Memphis, Tennessee, and that at Texarkana, within the State of Arkansas, *211 appellee entered into a separate contract for the continued carriage, limiting appellant's liability and containing the following special provision, which was pleaded in defense, viz.: "That in case of total loss of any of the live stock covered by this contract from any cause for which the first party will be liable, payment will be made therefore on the basis of the actual cash value at the time and place of shipment, but in no case to exceed $100 for each horse, pony, gelding, mare, or stallion, mule or jack; $50 for each ox, bull or steer; $10 for each calf or hog; $3 for each sheep or goat. In case of injury or partial loss, the amount of damage claimed shall not exceed the same proportions." It is insisted that by virtue of this provision of the contract the measure of damage as against appellant is to be determined by the market value of appellee's horses at the time and place of shipment, and not at Talladega, as directed in the court's charge.
The question of the validity of a contract so limiting a carrier's common law liability for injuries occasioned by its own negligence has often been considered by the courts and the conclusions reached are conflicting. Southern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Maddox Co.,
The remaining assignments need but brief notice. We entirely agree with the conclusion reached in the case of St. Louis S.W. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Wester, 96 S.W. Rep., 769, to the effect that the Act of the Legislature of the State of Texas, approved March 13, 1905 (Gen. Laws of 1905, p. 29, c. 25) regulating the venue of suits against common carriers, is not repugnant to constitutional provisions and invalid on the ground, as appellant urges, that it is a "discriminatory and unlawful impediment and burden upon interstate commerce." While appellant is a foreign corporation whose line of railway is operated without this State, it nevertheless had an agent within this State, as provided in the Act of the Legislature named, and the court therefore properly overruled appellant's plea of privilege asserting its right to be sued in Dallas County. The court's charge defining negligence we think substantially correct, or at least, if not in approved form, the objection thereto was entirely cured by appellant's special charge number three, which was given by the court.
For the error in the charge of the court upon the measure of damages, the judgment as to appellant is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial, but in other respects and as to other parties the judgment is not disturbed.
Reversed and remanded.