Chronister Lumber Co. v. Williams

288 S.W. 402, 116 Tex. 207, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 113
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1926
DocketNo. 4359.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 402 (Chronister Lumber Co. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chronister Lumber Co. v. Williams, 288 S.W. 402, 116 Tex. 207, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 113 (Tex. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Judge NICKELS

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

Mrs. Bob Williams, widow of Bob Williams, brought the suit against Chronister Lumber Company, a corporation, and sought recovery of exemplary damages upon allegations that his death *209 was caused by the gross negligence of the corporation (his employer). The matter of compensatory damages is not, presently, involved. From a judgment allowing that recovery, Chronister Lumber Company prosecuted its appeal and the case is now pending in the Court of Civil Appeals, Ninth District. That court has certified questions as follows:

“Question One: Can the gross negligence of the woods foreman, Harris Anderson, be imputed to appellant, thereby making appellant guilty of gross negligence and liable in exemplary damages to appellee?

“Question Two: Can the gross negligence of Harris Anderson be imputed to appellee’s manager, S. W. Littlejohn, whom he represented and whose authority Anderson exercised in Little-john’s absence, and, through Littlejohn, to appellant, making it guilty of gross negligence, and thereby liable to appellee in exemplary damages?

“Question Three: Did Littlejohn occupy such a relation to appellant as to make it liable in exemplary damages for his gross negligence, and, through him, liable for the gross negligence of the foreman, Harris Anderson, who exercised his authority in his absence, in the particular field of his employment — that is, as woods foreman?

“Question Four: In Railway Company v. Cowser, 57 Texas, 306, you said: ‘Exemplary damages are allowed only for the wilful act, omission or gross negligence of the “defendant” to the suit, if a corporation, for the wilful act, omission or gross negligence of one representing it in its corporate capacity, as a corporate officer, but not of a mere ordinary servant or agent.’ Under the proposition of law thus announced, did Harris Anderson represent appellant in its ‘corporate capacity,’ so that his gross negligence would be imputed to appellant, a corporation, thereby making it liable in exemplary damages for his gross negligence? Did Littlejohn represent appellant in its ‘corporate capacity’ in the sense in which that expression is used in the foregoing legal proposition ?

“Question Five: On the issue of gross negligence and exemplary damages, what must be the official relation of the guilty servant to his master, a corporation, to make it liable in exemplary damages for his gross negligence?”

A digest of the relevant evidence is included in the certificate, *210 and the controlling facts shown will appear in the course of the opinion.

Sec. 26, Art. 16, of the Constitution declares that “Every person, corporation, or company that may commit a homicide through wilful act or omission, or gross neglect, shall be responsible in exemplary damages to the surviving husband, widow, heirs of his or her body, of such of them as there may be,” etc.

It will be noted that the provision does not name parents as being amongst those to whom the right of action is given. Whatever rights the surviving parents have depend upon, and are restricted by, the Death Statute (Arts. 2899-2903, R. S. 1879; Arts. 4694-99, R. S. 1911; Title 77, R. S. 1925) ; as "to parents, the statute occupies a field not within the bounds of the constitutional provision cited. And this renders Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Cowser, 57 Texas, 293, 305-6, unauthoritative here. Cowser and wife sued for damages (actual and exemplary) for the death of their adult son, caused by the (alleged) gross negligence of the railroad corporation, then acting by and through its “trainmaster” and train operatives. In respect of punitive damages, at least, they had no cause of action save that given (and limited) by the Death Statute then in force (Arts. 2899-2903, R. S. 1879). As said by Judge Bonner, the statute plainly exhibited a material distinction between death caused by act or omission of the “proprietor,” or the “owner,” etc., “of a railroad,” on the one hand, and conduct of the “servant” or “agent” of such “proprietor.” or “owner.” As to actual damages, the statute provided cause of action whether the act or omission was by the one or the other; but for exemplary damages, it created the right only for the “gross negligence,” etc., “of the defendant.” The suit was against a railroad corporation (i. e. the “proprietor” or “owner” of a “railroad”) ; it was predicated upon the neglect, etc., of a “servant” or “agent;” and the right to maintain it depended solely upon a statute providing the distinctions noted. Because the petition merely averred that death was caused by “the gross negligence and carelessness of the agents, servants and employes” of the railroad owner, the trial court sustained a demurrer to the claim for punitive damages, and this action, Judge Bonner held, was correct. Such are the conditions which circumstanced the ruling included in the excerpt quoted by the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals. But the present suit is not maintained against the “proprietor” or “owner” of a “railroad,” and the right to maintain it is not dependent upon the Death Statute — for it was filed by the surviving “widow” against a corporation char *211 tered to manufacture lumber. It is a suit of the nature allowed by Sec. 26, Art. 16, of the Constitution. Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Cowser, therefore, does not give much assistance in the right determination of the questions certified. It may be remarked in passing, however, that, since the ruling was based upon the statutory distinctions mentioned, the opinion seems to imply that (but for those distinctions) the gross negligence of the “trainmaster” and operatives (who were not officers of the corporation, but were “servants” or “agents”) would have been imputable to the corporation.

Unless a corporation is to be held liable in punitive damages for the grossly negligent acts or omissions of any one or more of its servants, agents, employes and officers, any answer that may be given the questions propounded will, of necessity, involve some distinctions arbitrarily drawn. The Constitution (in the provision quoted) uses the word “corporation” without any qualification whatever. The entity of a corporation is a mere concept resting solely in legal fiction. A corporation is an artificial being, without mind, soul, heart or life; it may not conceive a purpose, form or execute a plan, or do an act except through the agency of men or women. Whatever those men and women (acting singly or in confederation) may do in its name or behalf — at least, within the general scope of employment — represents it in action in the achievement of the charter purpose. This is true of its janitor and of its president. The felling of trees was essential to the making of lumber and the manufacture of lumber was necessary to its sale; and each intermediate (or related) step, was logically and practicably of as much importance as was any other step in accomplishment of the corporate object. The stroke of the woodsman’s axe and the moving of the secretary’s pen equally represented the lumber corporation in movement; each acted for it in his appointed sphere and each there embodied and gave life to the corporation itself. This finds some illustration in Western Union Tel. Co. v. Czizek, 264 U. S., 281, 284, 68 L.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 402, 116 Tex. 207, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chronister-lumber-co-v-williams-tex-1926.