DocketNumber: No. 2364.
Judges: Willson
Filed Date: 2/17/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
It is not contended in any of the propositions in appellants' brief that the delivery of the cotton to the compress was a delivery to the consignee Devereux. Therefore this court is not called upon to determine whether the finding involved in the judgment that there was no such delivery was warranted by the testimony or not. Ry. Co. v. Wood,
In effect the contention here is that it appeared as a matter of law that the cotton was not delivered to the consignee, but that appellants continued in possession of it after it reached Jacksonville and were holding it as warehousemen at the time it was destroyed by fire.
We think the contention is not tenable in the face of the receipts in evidence showing the cotton to have been delivered to the compress company "for account of Frank Devereux," the consignee. If the transaction between appellants and the compress company was what the receipts show it to have been, and there is nothing in the record which required the trial court or requires this court to find it was not, the cotton was delivered to the compress company to hold, not for the Director General, but for Devereux. If it was, then it was wrongfully delivered, and appellants were liable to appellee as for a conversion of it, within the rule applied in Ry. Co. v. Seley,
The assignment attacking the validity of the judgment so far as it is against appellant Walker D. Hines as Director General of Railroads is sustained. At the time of the trial of the cause, to wit, in May, 1920, the Texas New Orleans Railroad Company's line of railway had been returned to its owners, and the only proper party defendant was the appellant John Barton Payne, who had been designated by the President as the agent of the federal government to represent it in the defense of suits based on causes of action arising during the time the President operated railroads, in accordance with the requirement of the Act of Congress of February 28, 1920. And the United States also was not a proper party to the suit, except through said agent. 139 Cyc. 775.
The judgment will be reversed so far as it is against said Hines and the United States, and judgment will be here rendered that appellee take nothing as against them, and that they, respectfully, recover the costs incurred by them on this appeal. It will be affirmed so far as it is against said John Barton Payne as agent aforesaid.
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Vance ( 1912 )
San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co. v. Wood ( 1905 )
Boone v. Herald News Co. ( 1901 )
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Seley & Early ( 1903 )