Court Opinion

ID: 3912677
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:41:04.314297+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:40.380663
License: Public Domain

Edgar Kerr instituted this suit against the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas to recover damages for alleged injuries to a shipment of cattle over the defendant's railway from the town of Commerce, to the city of Ft. Worth, and from a judgment in plaintiff's favor the defendant has appealed.
The suit was based upon allegations of negligence in the following respects: (1) In failing to provide suitable pens at Commerce for holding the stock until they could be shipped; (2) that the cattle were held in such pens awaiting shipment for an unreasonable length of time; (3) that the cars in which the cattle were shipped were overloaded; and that, after starting them from Commerce to Ft. Worth, they were roughly handled and unreasonably delayed. By reason of all of which alleged negligence plaintiff claimed that the cattle were crippled and bruised, suffered a shrinkage in flesh, and became stale in appearance, and thereby their market value was greatly depreciated.
The first four paragraphs of the court's charge were as follows:
"(1) `Ordinary care,' as that term is used in this charge, means such care as a person of ordinary caution or prudence would use under the same or similar circumstances. A failure to use such care constitutes negligence.
"(2) It was the duty of the defendant to exercise ordinary care to keep and maintain its stock pens at Commerce in reasonably good condition for the handling of such stock as were tendered to it for shipment at such station, and a failure so to do would constitute negligence.
"(3) It was also the duty of the defendant to exercise ordinary care to run and operate its freight trains for the transportation of freight over its lines of railway at regular times, and to operate same for the transportation of such freight as was tendered to it for shipment with ordinary care and dispatch, and a failure so to do would constitute negligence.
"(4) It was also the duty of the defendant, upon receiving plaintiff's cattle in its shipping pens at Commerce, to exercise ordinary care to load and transport said cattle at and from said station to their destination at Ft. Worth within a reasonable time: and it was further the duty of said defendant to so transport said cattle, and to handle them while in its posses sion with ordinary care and dispatch, and to avoid injuring them unnecessarily. A failure to exercise such care in loading handling and transporting said cattle would be negligence."
In the fifth paragraph of the charge, the same issues of negligence already submitted in the second, third, and fourth paragraphs were again submitted, in connection with an instruction that if any one or more of such allegations of negligence was or were sustained by proof, and if the jury should find that the same was the proximate cause of the alleged injuries to the cattle, if any, and their market value was thereby depreciated, then a verdict should be returned in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of such depreciation. We are of the opinion that, in thus repeating in the fifth paragraph all of the issues of negligence which had already *Page 1060 
been submitted in the preceding paragraphs, undue emphasis was given to those issues which was probably harmful to the appellant, as insisted in one of its assignments of error.
Marvin Thompson, a witness for the plaintiff, over the defendant's objection was permitted to testify that, if the cattle had reached Ft. Worth in good condition they would have been worth on the market from $1.50 to $2.50 per head more than they were worth in the condition they were in when they reached their destination. This witness had already testified that he did not know the market values of such cattle in Ft. Worth, and, based upon that testimony, the defendant objected to the estimate already mentioned, for the reason that he had not properly qualified to give such estimate. Under the circumstances, the estimate of damages so given by the witness necessarily involved a mere guess, and the objection urged to it should have been sustained. A different question would have been presented if the witness had estimated the depreciation on a percentage basis, rather than in specified sums. H. B. T. Ry. v. Vogel, 156 S.W. 261.
We are of the opinion, further, that the court should have given an instruction to the jury, in effect, that if they should find that any of the alleged injuries to the cattle were due to the inherent nature or proper vice of the animals, and not caused by any alleged negligence on the part of the defendant, then for such injuries no damages could be allowed. Nor do we think that it was necessary for the defendant to specially plead that defense, unless it could be said that the evidence showed some inherent vice in these particular cattle which was not common to cattle generally. Certainly, proof upon that issue would be admissible under the general denial of the negligence that was charged against the defendant, and, such being true, the defendant would be entitled to an instruction presenting such facts affirmatively in the court's charge. Wells Fargo Express Co. v. Benjamin (Sup.) 179 S.W. 513; F. W.  D.C. Ry. v. Berry, 170 S.W. 128.
It may be, as insisted by the appellee, that the requested instruction upon that issue was argumentative in form, and therefore properly refused; but even if that be true, the court should have given a proper instruction in the main charge presenting that defense, in view of the exception taken to the action of the court at the time in failing so to do, and which refusal is made the basis of another assignment of error. Olds Motor Works v. Churchill, 175 S.W. 785.
We are of the opinion that by reason of the three errors noted above, considered as a whole, the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded, even though it could be said that any one of those errors considered alone would not be sufficient to require such reversal.
We deem it proper to notice two other criticisms made by appellant of the court's charge, neither nor both of which would constitute reversible error, but which should be avoided upon another trial; one of which is that, in submitting the converse of the theories upon which plaintiff sought a recovery, one of the issues of negligence was omitted. Of course, defendant could not be heard to complain in this court of that omission, in the absence of a requested instruction thereon. The other criticism is to that part of the fourth paragraph of the charge wherein the jury were told, among other things, that a failure to exercise care in loading the cattle would be negligence. The complaint made of that instruction is that there was no pleading or evidence raising that issue, which contention is borne out by the record. It is not probable that, reading paragraph 4 of the charge as a whole, the jury interpreted it in the manner suggested by the criticism mentioned. But we suggest that it would be advisable to so frame the charge on another trial as to avoid that criticism.
We are of the opinion that there was no error in the court's refusal to admit in evidence a certain record made by the witness A. J. Ankerson, live stock inspector at Ft. Worth, who inspected the plaintiff's cattle at the time they were unloaded in Ft. Worth, such record purporting to show the condition of the cattle and of the car at that time, especially as the witness testified to the same facts from actual memory.
For the reasons noted, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.