Crawleigh v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co.

67 S.W. 140, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 260, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 140 (Crawleigh v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co.) 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
Crawleigh v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co., 67 S.W. 140, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 260, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 106 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

PLY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit for damages occasioned by the death of Andrew P. Crawleigh, which was instituted by appellant, the father of deceased, against appellee. After hearing the evidence the court submitted no issue, except the question as to whether deceased *261 when killed was a passenger on appellee’s train. The issue was found against appellant and judgment was rendered for appellee.

There was a conflict in the evidence as to the circumstances under which deceased boarded the train of appellee a short time before his death, but the verdict of the jury on the issue as to deceased being a passenger was supported by a strong preponderance in the evidence. The material facts are that on the 29th day of May, 1900, Andrew Crawleigh, the son of appellant, desiring to go to Del Rio from San Antonio, in company with a companion, got on a flat car belonging to a freight train about to leave San Antonio for Del Rio, which train collided with another at a point near Presa street, within .the limits of the city of San Antonio, and Andrew Crawleigh and his companion were killed. Deceased had not paid anything to ride on the train and his presence thereon was unknown to the crew operating the train. There was a rule promulgated by appellee prohibiting anyone from riding on a freight train, and denying the privilege to any employe to grant permission so to do. No such permission was sought or given, and the train crew swore that they did not know that deceased and his companion got on the train.

The sole ground of recovery in this case was that deceased occupied the position of passenger towards appellee, and under the pleadings, if he was not a passenger, appellant could not recover. There is no count alleging that he was a trespasser on the train and setting up the obligations that appellee owed to him as a trespasser, but it was reiterated in the petition that he had paid his fare and boarded the flat car with the knowledge and consent of the conductor.

The evidence introduced by appellant had as its object demonstration of the fact that the deceased had paid his fare to the conductor, had his permission to get on the car, and was therefore a passenger. The issue •as to deceased being a passenger was submitted to the jury by the court, and the assignments urging objections to the charge are very uncertain. It will be sufficient to say that there was nothing in the charge that assumed that deceased was not a passenger or that gave undue prominence to the negative side of the issue. No tenable objections are urged to the charge. As supplemented by the special charge requested by appellee, the charge presented every issue arising under the pleadings .and facts.

Appellant asked a charge which involves the proposition that if deceased was a trespasser on the train and Ms presence thereon was not known to the employes of appellee, still if the collision in which he was killed occurred through the gross negligence of the employes the railroad ■company would be liable in damages for his death. To the discussion of tMs proposition over two-thirds of the brief of appellant is devoted, and to support it a lengthy array of authorities from the courts of many States, including a number from Texas and from different Federal •courts, are cited. We have consulted many of the authorities and find *262 none that support the propositions contained in the special charges asked by appellant..

The requested charges are as follows:

“You are further charged, at the instance of plaintiff, that if you believe from the evidence that plaintiff’s deceased son, at the time he was killed, was a trespasser on defendant’s train, he did not thereby forfeit all his rights, and if you further believe from the evidence that he was a trespasser at said time and place, but was riding in a reasonably safe place on defendants’s train at the time, and was only guilty of slight negligence when he was injured and killed, if you believe from the evidence that he was injured and killed by a collision of defendant’s train, and further believe from the evidence that the defendant, its servants, agents, and employes, in a grossly negligent and reckless manner, so operated said trains to cause them to collide, and such collision was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s son, and that plaintiff’s said deceased son did not then and there directly contribute to his death, then you will find for plaintiff. You are further instructed that “gross negligence,” as set out in this charge, is defined to be that entire want of care which would raise a presumption of a conscious indifference to consequences, and the conduct of the servants and agents of defendants can not be considered gross negligence, unless evinced by an entire failure on their part to exercise care, or by the exercise of so slight a degree of care on their part as to justify tire belief that they were indifferent to the interest and welfare of others. By the term recklessness, as herein set out, is meant, ‘the state or quality of being reckless or heedless; perverse or desperate rashness.’
“You are further charged, at the instance of plaintiff, that if you should believe, from the evidence in this case, that plaintiff’s son was a trespasser on said defendant’s train at the time he was injured and killed by a collision of defendant’s trains, and further find from the evidence in the case that the defendant, its servants and employes in charge of said trains, so operated, permitted, or caused to be operated said trains with such willful negligence as to directly and proximately cause the death of plaintiff’s said minor son, then in that event you will find for plaintiff.
“By the term ‘willful,’ as herein set out, is meant voluntary, deliberate, intentional; obstinate and unreasonable; not to be moved from one’s notions, inclinations, purposes, or the like, by counsel, advice, commands, or instructions.”

It will be noted that in these charges the liability of appellee attached if the son of appellant was riding in a reasonably safe place on the train, regardless of the fact that no one knew he was on the train, and regardless of the fact that he had no invitation, express or implied, to be on the train. We do not think such a proposition can be sustained by any text book or decision. On the other hand there are numerous authorities that condemn any such proposition.

In the case of Dalton v. Railway, 56 Southwestern Reporter, 657, a de *263 murer to a petition was sustained in which it was averred that the deceased boarded a freight train and that the employes of the railway company knew he was on there, and it was held by the -Court of Appeals of Kentucky that the only duty a railroad company owed to anyone who was riding on a freight train without right, and by the mere sufferance of the train crew, was not to injure him after knewledge of his danger, and the company was not liable for his death in a collision, even though it resulted from the company’s gross negligence.

In the case of Railway v. Burnsed, 12

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 140, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 260, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawleigh-v-galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-texapp-1902.