Dillingham v. Russell

11 S.W. 139, 73 Tex. 47, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1140
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1889
DocketNo. 2601
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 11 S.W. 139 (Dillingham v. Russell) 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
Dillingham v. Russell, 11 S.W. 139, 73 Tex. 47, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1140 (Tex. 1889).

Opinion

Stayton, Chief Justice.—

This action was brought by defendant in error, July 28, 1887, against plaintiffs in error, who were receivers appointed by a Circuit Court of the United States prior to the time the injury complained of was inflicted, and in possession of and operating the Houston & Texas Central Railway at the time plaintiff claims to have been injured. It was brought to recover damages, actual and exemplary, on account of injuries resulting from an assault and battery made on him while a passenger in one of the cars, by the conductor in charge of the train and in the employment of the receivers.

There was a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant in error for $1000 as actual and $2000 as exemplary damages.

Plaintiffs in error by plea denied the jurisdiction of the court below on the ground that no court other than the one appointing them could exercise jurisdiction.

This was overruled, and correctly so, for whatever may be the true rule in suits brought against receivers, for necessity for leave to sue them in other courts, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1887, receivers appointed by the courts of the United States are subject to suit without leave in any court having jurisdiction over the subject matter.

Ho court can interfere with the custody of property held by another court through a receiver, but may establish by its judgment a debt against the receivership, which must be recognized even by the court appointing the receiver, and is not open to revision by it if the court rendering the judgment had jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties.

The manner in which a judgment so rendered shall be paid, and the adjustment of equities between all persons having claims on the property and effects in the hands of a receiver made, must necessarily be under the control of the court having custody through its receiver, but this does not affect the jurisdiction of other courts conclusively to establish by judgment' the existence and extent of a claim.

On the trial the conductor testified as a witness, and on being interrogated stated that he did not tell A. W. Williams on the night after the difficulty, holding his ticket punch in his hand, This is the thing I did the son of a bitch up with,” and 'afterwards Williams was permitted to [51]*51state that the witness at time and place mentioned did make such a statement to him.

The evidence was objected to on the ground that the declarations of fhe conductor made subsequently to the difficulty were not admissible ■against the defendants.

After the evidence was admitted the court withdrew it from the consideration of the jury and instructed them not to consider it, but it is insisted that the judgment should be reversed because of its admission.

It is frequently the case that evidence is admitted which, on reflection, the trial court deems it proper to withdraw from the consideration of the jury, and in some cases such action ought to be held to cure the error, while in other cases the evidence might be of such character and the whole case so presented as to induce the belief that the jury may have been influenced by the erroneous admission of evidence although subsequently told by the court to disregard it. In the latter case the admission of evidence that ought to have been excluded might be ground for reversal, and in the former not.

The evidence of the witness Williams was not admissible for the purpose of proving that the conductor did strike the plantiff with his ticket punch; but it may have been relevant to the issue as to how the battery was made, and for the purpose of impeaching the evidence of the conductor to show that he had made statements out of court different from those made in court admissible.

If, however, the evidence was not admissible for any purpose we do not perceive that it was calculated to operate to the injury of the defendants, for from the testimony given by the conductor on the trial and from the testimony of McCartney and the plaintiff, there could be but little doubt that the conductor did use his ticket punch in the battery, and the language shown to have been used by him at the time of the difficulty showed as fully his animus at that time as possibly could the language testified to by the witness Williams.

It is urged that the court erred in charging that defendants would be liable if the acts of the conductor were willful and malicious.

There is no doubt that ordinarily the master is not liable for an injury resulting from the willful and malicious acts of his agent not done in the •course of his employment. This is the rule in all cases in which the liability of the master depends on the sole fact that the person who inflicted the injury was in some business his servant; and if upon inquiry it be found that the act was not done while in the transaction of the master’s business then the aotis not to be deemed the act of the master, for as to that the wrongdoer was not his servant,.

.Tbe rule, however, cam not_hp. applied in a case in which the master by contract express or implied is under obligation to protect the injured person from the servant’s wrongful act as well as his own. When a duty is [52]*52thus .imposed on the-master thejservant employed to discharge _it_isjhe! representative of the master, for whose acts, whether- .oi.omission.or-eo.m-. mission, _resúltihgVuL injury to the person entitled to..have the duty performed the master must be heldasfully responsible -and_liableJo_makeat least actual compensation as_though_the act were his-own. perso.naLact.

In such cases if the servant does what the master could not do nor suffer to be done without violation of the particular duty resting upon him,, or if the servant omits to do that requisite to the full discharge of the master’s incumbent duty, then the master must be held responsible for the servant’s wrongful or malicious act or omission, for otherwise it would result that a rnakter might relieve himself from obligation to perform a duty fixed by contract or otherwise by the employment of servants to conduct the business to which the duty attaches.

The master’s obligation can not thus be avoided, and whether the servant’s act violative of the master’s duty be willful or malicious is a matter of no importance in determining the liability and obligation of the master to make actual compensation to the injured person.

It has been steadily held to be the duty of carriers of passengers to protect them, in so far as this can be done by the exercise of a high degree-of care, from the violence and insults of other passengers and strangers- and to protect them from the violence and insults of the carrier’s own servants, and the inquiry whether this duty arises from contract or from the nature of the employment becomes unimportant, except that the duty goes with the carrier’s contract, however made, whereby the relation of carrier and passenger is established. Ramsden v. Ry. Co., 104 Mass., 120; Bryant v. Rich, 106 Mass., 180; Croker v. Ry. Co., 36 Wis., 657; Stewart v. Ry. Co., 90 N. Y., 588; Sherley v. Billings, 8 Bush., 147; Railway v. Flexman, 103 Ill., 546; Railway v. Rector, 104 Ill., 296; Goddard v. Ry. Co., 57 Me., 202.

Under the facts of this case the court below properly held that the defendants as receivers were liable for injuries resulting from the willful or malicious acts of the conductor.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W. 139, 73 Tex. 47, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillingham-v-russell-tex-1889.