102 S.W. 105 | Tex. | 1907
This case was before us at the last term of this court and our determination of the point then presented is reported in the 99 Texas on page 654. The Court of Civil Appeals had held, that the petition for a removal of the case to the Circuit Court of the United States was good, and that it deprived the State Court of jurisdiction of the controversy and therefore declined to proceed further in determining the questions raised on the appeal. Being of the opinion that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in their ruling on the point, we reversed the judgment and remanded the case to that court for their action upon the other errors assigned. Having considered the case after the remand, that court approved the conclusions of fact and law of the trial court and affirmed the judgment.
Our former opinion gives a partial statement of the case, and so much as is there stated will not here be repeated. The defendant, the Texas Pacific Railway Company, made the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company a party to the suit and impleaded it; praying that in the event the plaintiffs recovered against it, the Texas Pacific Railway Company, for the damages, that accrued on the line of the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company, it have a recovery over against the latter for the amount. The case was tried before the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment against both the original defendants for $3,600 and a judgment in favor of the Texas Pacific Railway Company against the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company for one half of that amount. All parties against whom judgment was rendered appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals and each of them has applied to this court for a writ of error, which has been granted.
The first assignment of error in the application of the Texas Pacific Railway Company is to the effect, that the court erred in retaining jurisdiction of the cause after the petition and bond for removal were filed. This question was considered and decided by us at the last term of this court adversely to the railroad company. In the opinion then rendered (Eastin Knox v. Texas Pac. Ry. Co., 99 Texas), we followed the decision made on the same day in the case of the same company against Huber (
Upon this point we will, however, add that we have carefully examined the report of the case of Wecker v. The National Enameling and *560
Stamping Company (
The case having been tried without a jury the trial judge found, in substance, that the plaintiffs applied to defendant Tucker, as agent of the defendant, the Texas Pacific Railway Company, for cars to ship their cattle to Tulsa, in the Indian Territory and informed him that they desired to ship the cattle to Fort Worth, Texas, and thence over the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company to their destination; that the cattle were brought to the depot and after most of them were loaded on the cars, the agent, Tucker, presented to Eastin, one of the plaintiffs, who was in charge of the business for the firm, live stock contracts for shipping the cattle to Paris, Texas, and thence over the line of the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company to their destination; that Eastin objected to the shipment by that route, and that he was then told by the agent that he could not route the cattle to Tulsa any other way except by Paris; and that, in order to get their cattle shipped, Eastin signed the contracts. It was also found that the contracts were signed against the will of plaintiff for the reason that it was necessary that the cattle should be shipped and it was believed that *561 there was no other route by which they could be sent except by way of Paris. It was further found that there were two other routes by which the cattle might have been transported to Tulsa over the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company's lines, one by way of Fort Worth and the other by way of Sherman, each of which was about 290 miles in length, which was about one-half the distance via Paris, and that the defendant had an arrangement with its connecting line for a through shipment by way of Sherman; but that the plaintiffs did not know this fact. The court further found, that the cattle were damaged both by reason of their longer detention on the cars growing out of the longer transit and by the negligence of the connecting carrier, after the cattle were delivered to it. In its conclusions of law the court held, that the written contracts were obtained by duress and were therefore invalid, and that the Texas Pacific Railway Company and Tucker, its agent, were responsible to the plaintiffs for the damages.
It is elementary law that if a carrier deviates from the route fixed by his contract, he becomes responsible for all loss, which occurs either on his own or his connecting lines. By the deviation he becomes an insurer of the goods. It is also settled that when goods are delivered to a carrier for transportation to a designated point, it is his duty as a general rule to transport them by the safest and most direct route. If instructed as to the route he selects a different one, he becomes responsible for any loss that may occur in transit. (Express Co. v. Kountze Bros., 8 Wall., 342.) In the case cited the court say: "If this testimony be true, it is hard to conceive a grosser case of negligence, for here were two routes — the one safe and the other hazardous — and yet the express company, in defiance of the wishes of the owner of the property, reject the safe, and adopt the hazardous route." If a carrier becomes liable for all losses by a mere deviation from the route contracted for, for a stronger reason he should be held liable for all losses, when shipped over a route contrary to the express instruction of the shipper.
The numerous assignments of error of the Texas Pacific Railway Company upon the merits are mainly directed to the findings of fact of the trial judge. In some instances it is claimed that facts found are not alleged and in others that they are not supported by the evidence. As to all these we deem it sufficient to say, that there is enough alleged and enough proved as alleged to show the liability of that company. It is also assigned on behalf of that company that the court erred in holding it responsible for the negligence of the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company. As already intimated, we are of opinion, that by refusing to ship the cattle as directed by the plaintiff, the Texas Pacific Railway Company became responsible for all damages which accrued from the shipment.
In regard to the assignments of plaintiff in error, Tucker, we think, that in routing the cattle by way of Paris, contrary to the directions of the shipper, he was guilty of misfeasance — and not simply of non-feasance, and is therefore liable for the loss. This matter was discussed in our former opinion.
In the application for the writ of error of the St. Louis San *562 Francisco Railway Company, no complaint is made of the manner in which it was brought into the case. The only error specified is that the court erred in rendering judgment in favor of the Texas Pacific Railway Company against it for the damages which occurred on its line. The St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company were responsible to the plaintiffs for all damages which accrued to their cattle by reason of its negligence while in its hands — notwithstanding the liability of the initial carrier for the same loss. The Texas Pacific Railway Company having become the insurer of the cattle after they were delivered to its connecting carrier — when it was adjudged to pay for the negligence of the latter, it was subrogated to the right of the plaintiffs and had the right to be reimbursed for what it was required to pay on account of the negligent conduct of the St. Louis San Francisco Railway Company.
We find no error in the judgment and it is affirmed.