Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Boyles

33 S.W. 247, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 522, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 300
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 1895
DocketNo. 2027.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 247 (Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Boyles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Boyles, 33 S.W. 247, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 522, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 300 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

TARLTON, Chief Justice.

On May 26, 1893, Mrs. Boyles, the wife of appellee, J. A. Boyles, was, with her sick child, a passenger on the train of appellant. She took passage at El Reno, in the Indian Territory, for Ringgold, a station on the appellant’s line in Montague County, Texas. The latter station was her point of destination on the appellant’s line, but her point of ultimate destination was the home of her sister in the country, four of five miles from the town of St. Jo, a station in Montague County on another line of railway. In going to St. Jo by rail, it became necessary for Mrs. Boyles to remain all night at Ringgold. She was carried by the appellant beyond the latter station, to Bowie, a station some twenty miles further south, whence, on the next day, she was brought back free of charge by the appellant to Ring-gold.

On account of the alleged negligence of the company in taking her beyond her station, her husband brought this suit and recovered a verdict and judgment in damages for the sum of $75, from which this appeal is prosecuted. The fact of negligence, as substantially alleged in the petition, was, “that during the trip and long before the defendant’s train reached Ringgold, the passenger conductor came to the plaintiff’s wife and child and took up their tickets and gave them no marked tickets, and at the time told Mrs. Boyles to take care of her sick child and trust to him (the conductor), and assured her that he would see that she got off at Ringgold all right; that she relied on his assurances, and depended on him to inform her when she arrived at Ringgold; that she was busily engaged with her sick child, and did not hear the name of Ring-gold called by anyone, and did not know when she passed the station, and the conductor failed and neglected to notify her as he agreed to do of the arrival of the train at Ringgold, and that she did not know or suspect that she had passed the station until she was fifteen or twenty miles beyond it, at which time she called the conductor and reminded him of his promise, and of her earnest desire to be at Ringgold that night, and that he failed and refused to carry her back.”

The evidence relied upon by the plaintiff to sustain these allegations is the testimony of Mrs. Boyles, as follows: “My child was very sick, and when the conductor came around he noticed my child being sick and told me to attend to my child and that he would see me.off at Ring-gold, and I relied on his promise and was.attending to my child when we passed my station, and I did not know anything about it. If the name of the station was called, I did not hear it, and knew no better until we had got some distance beyond there. I didn’t know we had passed *524 Ringgold until 1 heard the trainmen call ‘Bowie/ when I found that we had passed my place, and I then called the conductor and told him about it, and he said for me to stay all night at Bowie, as there would be no train back until morning, and he would bring me back in the morning on the train. * * * I went to the train the next morning and the conductor carried me back to Ringgold, and I got to St. Jo that evening. If I had not been carried past, I wordd have got there in the morning.”

The conversation as detailed by Mrs. Boyles with the conductor conflicted with the statement of the latter, who testified as follows: “When I took up Mrs. Boyles’ ticket she asked me about the station she got off at, and I told her she would be notified in time to get off. I didn’t tell her I would see her off, or help her, but that she would be notified, and when we left Terral, the station before we get to Ringgold, my brakeman called out twice loud enough to be heard over the car, ‘The next station is Ringgold/ and then when the whistle sounded he called it out twice more, and the people began to get off and I went to the front end. There were several people got off, men, women and children, and I had no idea but what this lady got off till I went through the ear after we left there and found her still on. She said she did not hear the station called, and I then told her that I would carry her on to Bowie, where there were good hotels, and would bring her back the next morning, to which she made no objection. I carried her back the next morning.”

In his statement that notice of the station was announced four times, and that the train was stopped at Ringgold, and that passengers for that station left the train, the conductor is corroborated by other witnesses.

On this issue of negligence, and the consequent damages, the court thus instructed the jury: “It is the duty of railway companies in transporting passengers over their railway lines to have announced the names of the different stations upon their line of railway upon the arrival of their train, in such a manner that persons using ordinary care will be apprised of the name of the station. And if you find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff’s wife and children were passengers on defendant’s train as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and that she was carried beyond the place of her destination, but that the defendants by its agents and employes did duly call out the name of the station, Ringgold, upon the arrival of said train, you will find for the defendant, unless you further find that before the train reached Ringgold, the conductor in charge of defendant’s train assured the wife of plaintiff that she might rely upon him to notify her personally when the train reached Ringgold, and that she did rely upon said assurance, and that she did not hear the name of the station called out, and did not know when the train passed the station, and that by reason of being carried beyond her destination, the wife of the plaintiff suffered physically and mentally as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and that the injuries, if any, were occasioned directly and proximately by the negligence of the defendant’s *525 •agents and servants, then you may find for plaintiff such damages as the evidence may show to he fair and reasonable to him for damages as alleged in his petition.”

That portion of the foregoing instruction which imposed the duty upon the carrier, on account of the promise of the conductor to give personal notice to Mrs. Boyles of the arrival of the train, we hold, under the condition of the evidence in this ease, to be erroneous.

Ordinarily the duty of a conductor as such toward a passenger has ceased when the carrier has transported the passenger in.safety to his point of destination, has announced the arrival of the train at the station, and has afforded reasonable time and opportunity for the passenger to leave the cars. Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 614. If the conductor undertake to do more, as to awaken a sleeping passenger and to notify him personally, it becomes a mere personal-undertaking as between the conductor and the passenger, an undertaking beyond the scope of the conductor’s duty, and in no sense the obligation of the carrier. “So, it is said that it is ordinarily no part of the carrier’s duty to see that passengers are waked when the train reaches their destination, and that the company is not bound by the conductor’s promise to so awaken the passenger. Exceptional circumstances might, however, impose the duty.” Hutchinson on Carriers, sec. 617b.

The Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth District (Railway v. Kendrick, 32 S. W. Rep., 43) quotes with evident approval the decision of the Supreme Court of Mississippi, Sevier v.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 247, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 522, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-texas-railway-co-v-boyles-texapp-1895.