Citation Numbers: 141 S.W. 829
Judges: Reese
Filed Date: 11/25/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an action by J. C. Saunders against the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company and the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Company to recover damages to several car loads of cattle, amounting to 499 head, shipped by plaintiff from Spofford, Tex., to San Antonio over the line of the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway, and over the line of the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway from San Antonio to Falfurrias, Tex., in November, 1909. The cattle were delivered by the shipper to the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway, and carried by it to San Antonio, where they were delivered to the San Antonio & Aran-sas Pass Railway, by which they were carried to Falfurrias. Each line issued a separate bill of lading, providing that it should not be liable for damages caused by the connecting line. It was alleged that some of the cattle were killed en route, and others injured, by reason of the negligent handling of the cars; the total damages claimed being $2,500. Upon the trial the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Company, and submitted the issues as against the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company. The jury returned a
We find from the evidence that the cattle referred to (499 head) were delivered by ap-pellee to appellant on November 22, 1909, at Spofford, Tex., for transportation to San Antonio, and a bill of lading issued, containing the provision that the carrier should not be liable for damages beyond its own line; also allowing free transportation to the shipper and another person, who were to loot after the cattle en route. The cattle were loaded in 17 cars, and left Spofford about noon on the 22d of November, arriving at San Antonio about 9 hours thereafter. They were there unloaded at the Union Stockyards, and were delivered to the Aran-sas Pass Railway during the night. The latter company issued a bill of lading with similar provisions to that issued by the initial carrier, providing for carriage from San Antonio to Falfurrias, and upon this bill of lading the cattle were carried from San Antonio to Falfurrias, leaving early on the morning of the 23d, and arriving at Falfurrias the afternoon of the same day. Thirteen of the cattle were dead when they got to San Antonio, and of the remainder three were dead when they reached Falfur-rias. A great many of them were injured. The evidence is sufficient to authorize the finding of the jury that the value of the cattle killed, and the damages to the remainder caused by injuries received, was $1,970, the amount of the verdict; that these damages were the proximate result of the negligent handling of the cattle by the appellant between Spofford and San Antonio; and that appellee was not guilty of negligence, either in attention to the cattle en route, or in undertaking to ship the cattle in such impoverished and weakened condition as that they were not able to stand the hardships of carriage, if properly handled. One of the defenses pleaded was that the cattle were poor, weak, and unable to withstand the ordinary hardships of railway transportation, and that what injuries they received were proximately caused by this fact. This issue was submitted to the jury by appropriate instructions, and found against appellant. The evidence was sufficient to support the finding.
No complaint is made by appellant of the charge to return a verdict for its codefend-ant, which was represented by the same counsel. The evidence was sufficient to show that the cattle were properly handled by the Aransas Pass Railway Company, and that the injuries were the proximate result of the rough and negligent handling of the cars while being hauled from Spofford to San Antonio. It is true that the cattle might have suffered injury between San Antonio and Falfurrias, not due to the negligence of the Aransas Pass, and for which neither road would be liable; but the jury could not, under the instructions given, have charged appellant with such damages. The objection to the charge cannot be sustained.
By the second assignment, objection is made to the following portion of the charge: “As to the cattle that died in transit, if you believe that defendants, or either of them, are liable to plaintiff therefor, under these instructions, then the measure of damage as to such cattle would be the reasonable market value of same at Falfurrias, Tex., at the time and in the condition they would have arrived there, had they not died in transit.” This charge, also, is not on the issue of liability, but the measure of damages solely; and, in view of the charge on the issue of liability heretofore referred to, the jury could not have understood that appellant could be charged for the value. of such cattle as died between San Antonio and Falfurrias, unless their death was proximately caused by the rough handling on ap
The fourth assignment of error is without merit. The court instructed tbe jury in paragraph 12 of the charge that if the cattle were injured while being transported, but such injuries “were caused or contributed to in whole or in part through the negligence of plaintiff or his agents, while transporting the cattle,” plaintiff would not be entitled to recover for such damages, even though tbe negligence of defendant was a concurring cause thereof.
Tbe bill of exceptions is signed by tbe judge with the following explanation: “After the jury for the week, numbering 23 qualified jurors, were impaneled, the case was called for trial, and thereupon a jury list containing the names of all said jurors was furnished to plaintiff, and a like list was furnished to the defendants. The two defendants were at that time and throughout the trial of the case represented by the same counsel, and it appeared that there was no conflict of interests between the two defendants, and they acted together, through the same counsel, throughout the trial in a common defense.”
It further appears from the record that the defendants filed separate answers, which are substantially identical; each setting ui> the same defenses; each denying that the cattle were injured by its negligence, or that of its eodefendant; and each expressly deny
It is a sufficient answer to this assignment, in any event, that it is not made to appear that this appellant suffered any injury by reason of the action of the trial court. Snow v. Starr, 75 Tex. 411, 12 S. W. 673; Waggoner v. Dodson, 96 Tex. 7-17, 68 S. W. 813, 69 S. W. 993; Wolf v. Perryman, 82 Tex. 112, 17 S. W. 772. Appellant and its code-fendant were furnished one list, to which no objection was made. Attorneys representing both undertook to challenge peremptorily nine of the jurors named. It does not appear which were objectionable to appellant and which to its codefendant. Three of these challenges were denied by the court, leaving six. It does not appear but that these six are the same persons who were objectionable to and challenged by appellant. For all that is shown, appellant exercised its right of challenge in striking out these six names.
But for another reason we do not think the court erred in the matter. Appellant’s position now is that it was interested in showing that, if any injury occurred by the negligence of either party, it was done by its co-defendant. The Aransas Pass presumably was making the same contention. How ■could the same attorneys, acting for both parties, consistently and properly represent the interests of both defendants? That a man cannot serve two masters, if their interests are antagonistic, is not only good morals, but hornbook law. We cannot think that the eminent attorneys who represented both ■defendants in this ease intended to put themselves in any such position. We must conclude that there was no real antagonism between the defendants, but that they were making a common defense, and were, in law, one party, so far as the right of challenge is concerned. In the circumstances of this case, it would have given appellant an unfair advantage to have allowed it and its codefendant more than six peremptory challenges. The assignment must be .overruled.
We find no error in the record requiring reversal of the judgment, and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.