221 S.W. 571 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1920
This action was by R. W. Williamson & Co. to recover of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company the value of 30 bales of cotton out of an entire shipment of 104 bales. Plaintiffs sued as assignees of a bill of lading issued by defendant, whereby the latter agreed to transport the 104 bales from Detroit, Tex., to New Orleans, La., and there to deliver the same to the Harrison or Leland Steamship Line; from which port said cotton was to be transported by the steamship line to Liverpool, England, and there delivered to the order of the consignor. A judgment of the trial court in favor of plaintiff was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals, Fifth District. 187 S. W. 356.
The important question in the case is whether plaintiffs’ cause of action was barred by the four years’ statute of limitation. The case was tried before the court without a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts, which, in so far as material to this issue, are as follows:
The bill-of lading was executed and'the cotton delivered to defendant at Detroit, Tex., on October 27, 1904. Thirty bales of the shipment were, while in defendant’s possession, destroyed by fire on November 5,1904. The remaining 74 bales were delivered by defendant .on November 14, 1904, to the Leland Line at New Orleans, and two days later the latter issued to plaintiff its bill of lading covering the 74 bales. On December 7, 1904, upon surrender by the plaintiff to the Leland Line of the two bills of lading, the Leland Line delivered the 74 bales to plaintiff at Liverpool, England. It was agreed that neither plaintiff nor the consignor had actual knowledge until January, 1905, that the fire had occurred while the shipment was in transit from Clarksville to New Orleans, and that it was thereby that the 30 bales of cotton sued for were not delivered. Except as to the bare facts as above detailed, the record is silent as to any evidence bearing upon the question of limitation. Plaintiffs’ suit was filed on December 17, 1908.
The other .assignment of error we think is without merit, and was properly overruled by the Court of Civil Appeals.
We conclude that the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and district court should be affirmed.
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