Court Opinion

ID: 3945985
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:08:49.998398+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:28.461481
License: Public Domain

The stenographer's transcript of the testimony taken on the trial of this case, in which the questions and answers with other proceedings are set out in full, is stricken out on motion of the appellee because it was not filed until after the present statute on that subject went into effect, which prohibits this very objectionable method of preparing a statement of facts. It is insisted in behalf of appellant that the motion should not prevail because when the case was tried this law had not taken effect, but it is well settled that statutes of procedure operate upon all pending litigation from the time they go into effect, unless it is therein otherwise provided. In this instance the court adjourned August 1, 1907, on which day an order was entered allowing twenty days for the preparation and filing of the statement of facts, and on August 19, the stenographer's transcript was filed, at which time the law covering the preparation and filing of such records had gone into effect, leaving ample time, however, for the preparation and filing of a statement of facts, as therein provided.
The judgment rests on the findings of the trial court, which in the absence of a statement of facts become conclusive here. The only questions raised by the assignments, therefore, which could avail appellant are questions of law raised by the rulings on the demurrers and those involved in the court's conclusions of law.
There was no error in overruling the demurrers to the answer pleading an excuse for not furnishing cars within the time demanded, this being a suit to recover damages to cattle for delay in furnishing cars, after demand made, since it contained the allegation that the rush of business and demand for cars had been so "unusual, unexpected and unprecedented" that "the defendant and its officers, agents and employes did not and could not, in the exercise of any degree of care and foresight whatever, have expected and anticipated the same, and it did not and could not have had at its command cars and rolling stock in sufficient number and quantity to meet the demand for cars and transportation of freight as made by parties all along its line in the order made."
Nor did the court err in its conclusions of law in holding that appellee was not liable for the expenditure of money for feed made necessary by the unprecedented weather while appellant was holding *Page 298 
his cattle waiting for cars, since the findings of fact establish that this unprecedented weather could not reasonably have been anticipated. Appellant was not liable as an insurer, but only for negligence.
It follows from these conclusions that the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.