209 S.W. 432 | Tex. App. | 1919
The following special plea was interposed by defendant:
"Further answering, defendant says that, if plaintiff's trunk and contents were lost or destroyed or not delivered to plaintiff, the same occurred during the year 1917, to wit, during the month of March, 1917, and that at the time the plaintiff L. H. Woodbury was traveling on an interstate or international ticket, purchased by her during the year 1917, from some point in Canada and over a route extending through the various states of the United States into and through the state of Texas, and that said trunk and baggage was checked from San Antonio, Tex., to El Paso, Tex., on said interstate or international ticket, and was and is interstate commerce, and the said plaintiff was then and there traveling on said ticket as a part of her trip which she was then and there making from the Dominion of Canada, through the various states of the Union, into and through the state of Texas, and was and is governed by the laws of the United States and the rules and regulations of Interstate Commerce Commission, and the said ticket was purchased during the year 1917, and that at the time of the purchase of said ticket and at the time of checking of said baggage, the defendant, Galveston, Harrisburg San Antonio Railway Company, had duly promulgated and filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission its tariffs, rates, fares, and charges for transportation between different points on its lines, and of the amount of baggage checked on each ticket, and of the value of said baggage, and that under the terms of said tariffs, rates, and charges so filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and which had theretofore been approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission, and were then and there in force, and had been duly posted, it was specially provided that the valuation of said baggage was limited to the sum of $100, unless a greater value was declared and paid for by the passenger, and that said tariffs, rates, and schedules contained provisions limiting the free transportation of baggage on the lines of the defendant company between San Antonio and El Paso and elsewhere to certain weight and the liability of the defendant company to $100, and which tariffs, rates, and schedules had a table of charges for excess weights and of excess values, which specially provided that for excess values in excess of $100, or fractional part thereof, an additional or special charge would be made, and defendant alleges that the said tariffs, rates, and schedules were then and there in full force and effect, and that plaintiff did not declare a greater value than $100, and did not pay for any excess value over and above $100.
"Plaintiff alleges that, amongst other things, the said tariffs provided as follows: [Here is quoted regulations filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission hereinafter shown].
"And defendant alleges that the plaintiff did not, when she checked said baggage, or at any time, declare the value of the baggage so checked to be in excess of $100, and did not pay for any weight in excess of 150 pounds, or for any value in excess of $100."
Upon the trial, appellee proved the promulgation and filing with the Interstate Commerce Commission of its tariffs, rates, etc., as alleged and its approval by the commission. It was shown that a copy thereof was on file in the San Antonio office of defendant. It was also shown that there was hung in the depot waiting room at San Antonio over the ticket office, and also in the baggageroom, a sign which reads: *434
"General Freight Office, Houston, Texas (for freight.)
"General Passenger Office, Houston, Texas (for passengers.)
"The rate and fare schedules applying from or at this station and indices of this company's tariffs are on file in this office and may be inspected by any person upon application, and without the assignment of any reason for such desire.
"The agent, or other employé on duty in the office, will lend any assistance desired in securing information from or in interpreting such schedules.
"J. R. Christian, General Freight Agent.
"T. J. Anderson, General Passenger Agent.
"C. K. Dunlap, Traffic Manager."
Mrs. Woodbury made no declaration to appellee of any increased valuation of the trunk, and paid no additional charges in that connection; it appearing that the trunk was checked and transported upon the ticket purchased by Mrs. Woodbury as aforesaid. Mrs. Woodbury had no actual knowledge of the matter relied upon by defendant as limiting its liability for loss of baggage. No agent of defendant informed her at the time she checked her baggage of any limitation of liability if the same was lost.
The case was tried before a jury and submitted upon one special issue, viz.: What was the reasonable value of the trunk and its contents at the time of its loss? This was answered, "$500.00." Upon this answer the court entered judgment in plaintiff's favor for $100, from which she appeals, assigning as error the failure to enter judgment for the full value of the trunk and its contents as found by the jury. The correctness of the court's action in this matter is the question presented for review.
On the other hand, appellee contends that the act of Congress regulating common carriers of interstate and foreign commerce, especially the so-called "Cummins Amendment" (Act of August 9th, 1916, c.
The entire commerce of the United States, foreign and interstate, is subject to the provisions of the act of Congress. Texas Pacific Ry. Co. v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
In the Texas Pacific Railway Company Case, the court considered the validity of a regulation by the Interstate Commerce Commission of rates to be charged in the United States for freight originating in a foreign country and transported upon through bill of lading to a point in the United States. While the particular regulation was not upheld, the power to regulate the rate was sustained.
In the Texas New Orleans Railway Co. Case, it was held that a shipment destined by the purchaser for export, made by the seller under a local bill of lading from an interior point in Texas to a Texas Gulf port, at which the lumber was unloaded without delay by the purchaser's order into slips or docks in reach of ship's tackle and was then loaded into chartered ships by which it was carried to a foreign port — such shipment not being an isolated one but typical of many others — constitutes foreign commerce, and, as such, was governed by the tariffs on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission, to the exclusion of the rights established by the state Railroad Commission, although the seller had no connection with the lumber after it reached the railway terminus and had no concern with its destination after it came into the hands of the purchaser, and no knowledge thereof, and although the lumber had no definite foreign destination at the time of the initial shipment.
These cases are not regarded as in point. In the first case, the freight originated in a foreign country and was transported upon through bill of lading to a point in the United States. In the second case, the freight originated and was shipped from an interior point in the United States to a foreign country. Mrs. Woodbury's contract was not of that nature. The contract was made at Timmins, in Canada, and called for *435 transportation from such point in Canada to a point within the United States and return to the point in Canada The trunk in question was being transported upon this ticket, and was lost upon one stage of the journey in the United States. An inspection of the "Cummins Amendment" approved August 9, 1916, will disclose that it in no wise relates to a contract made in a foreign country for transportation over the rails of common carriers, when such contract is to be begun and completed in such foreign country. In this connection, see recent decision of the Interstate Commerce Commission in Re Heated Car Service Regulations, I. S. Docket No. 1155, decided July 23, 1918, reported in 50 Interst. Com. Com'n R. 620.
Neither do we think that the contract in question falls within the provisions of section 1 of the original act to regulate commerce and its amendments. Section 8563, U.S. Compiled Statutes 1918. This conclusion we think is supported by holdings to which we will now advert.
In the case of U.S. v. Philadelphia Reading Ry. Co. (D.C.) 188 F. 488, it appears a cargo of sugar was shipped from Hamburg, Germany, destined to Philadelphia for transportation in bond to Raymond, in the province of Alberta, Dominion of Canada. The Philadelphia Reading Railway Company carried this shipment over a part of the route within the United States at a less rate than would have been lawful if the shipment had originated at Philadelphia. The charging of this rate was alleged by the United States to be a criminal offense. The court held that the act of Congress concerning interstate commerce did not apply to a cargo shipped from Hamburg, Germany, destined as stated in the bill of lading, to Philadelphia, for transportation in bond to Alberta, Canada, and taken to its destination by continuous and uninterrupted transportation, at the hands of successive carriers; there being no delivery or change of title, but the different carriers merely assisting in a continuous transportation from one foreign country to another.
In the matter of Canales v. G., H. S. A. Ry. Co., 37 Interst. Com. Com'n R. 573, there was a shipment of sugar from Piedras Negras, Mexico, through Eagle Pass, Tex., destined to Agua Prieta, Mexico, and which was reconsigned at Eagle Pass to El Paso. The defendant waybilled the shipment in accordance with the terms of the original bill of lading to Douglas, Ariz., the point within the United States nearest to Agua Prieta, Mexico, and the shipment moved from Eagle Pass, through El Paso, Tex., to Douglas, and five months later was shipped back to El Paso, through Hachita. Canales sought a refund of all charges paid in excess of those which would have accrued for the transportation from Eagle Pass to El Paso if the shipment had moved in accordance with the shipper's instructions. The Interstate Commerce Commission, in passing upon the application, said:
"The overcharges in issue accrued within the United States on traffic moving from a point in Mexico to another point in Mexico. Such transportation is not embraced within the terms of the Act to Regulate Commerce. In U.S. v. P. R. Ry. Co. (D.C.) 188 F. 484, it was held that the so-called Elkins Act is inapplicable to the continuous transportation of goods in bond from a foreign country through the United States to a foreign country. Following that case, in Seymour v. M. L. T. R. R. S. S. Co., 35 Interst. Com. Com'n R. 492, which involved alleged overcharges on shipments of sugar from Germany through New Orleans to Eagle Pass and El Paso, destined to points in Mexico, we said that — `The sugar was transported from a nonadjacent foreign country through the United States to destination in an adjacent foreign country.'"
Now, as shown by the facts in this case, Mrs. Woodbury was traveling upon a ticket purchased in Canada which called for transportation from a point in Canada to a point in the United States and return. She was traveling upon that contract, and her trunk was being transported by virtue thereof, when the trunk was lost in the United States by one of the carriers engaged in performing the contract. The contract called for transportation from a point in Canada through the United States and back to the point in Canada. Upon the two authorities last cited, it seems that the act of Congress regulating commerce does not apply to the transportation in question. This being true, the courts of Texas must apply the law of Texas. Under the law of this state, the attempted limitation of liability by a railroad company for lost baggage is invalid. Mexican National Railroad Co. v. Ware, 60 S.W. 343; Railway Co. v. Maddox,
We are therefore of the opinion that the court below erred in limiting appellant's recovery to $100. The judgment of that court is reversed, and here rendered in favor of appellant for the sum of $500. *436