East Line & Red River R'y Co. v. Smith

65 Tex. 167, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 331
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1885
DocketCase No. 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 65 Tex. 167 (East Line & Red River R'y Co. v. Smith) 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
East Line & Red River R'y Co. v. Smith, 65 Tex. 167, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 331 (Tex. 1885).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

The petition alleged many acts of negligence of the railroad company to fix its liability for the injury -which resulted from the death of Louis N. Tetro. .The averments in regard to the defects in and unsuitableness of the cars called broad-gauge cars,”, the use of which in the train was alleged to be negligence, were very full. There was evidence tending to sustain the averments in reference to the negligent use of these cars, and it shows that one of them was the first derailed, and that thereby the track was broken and the two following cars thrown therefrom. In one of [170]*170the last named cars was the deceased, who was killed in the accident. There was also evidence of the unsound condition of the track.

The case thus standing, one of the paragraphs of the charge given by the court was: “If the said Tetro went upon the defendant’s cars as a passenger, and upon the train, and the same was wrecked, and the said Tetro was killed in the wreck, and if the evidence shows that the wreck was brought about and occasioned by the bad and defective condition of defendant’s railroad track, or by placing of broad-gauge cars into the train in which Tetro was, or by dangerous condition of the cars, or on account of the want of sufficient number of suitable train-men, or by the want of proper machinery and appliances for the cars in the train, all as alleged, or if the train was wrecked by any or all the causes combined, and if the defendant knew of the cause and defects which produced the wreck, or might have known them by the exercise of care, diligence and caution on its part, and it is not shown that Tetro brought about his own death by his own negligence, as averred by defendant, then the defendant is liable to plaintiff in actual damages.”

The giving of this charge is assigned as error, and the sole ground on which it is claimed that it was erroneous is that thereby the court in effect charged the jury that the placing of broad-gauge cars in the train was negligence, and that this was a violation of the rule which forbids a judge to charge upon the weight of evidence. The court in preceding parts of the charge, and in fact throughout the charge, informed the jury that the right of the plaintiff to recover depended upon whether the negligence of the defendant caused the injury.

The charge must be taken as a whole in order to determine whether or not it was erroneous or misleading, and it must be construed in the light of the issues made by the pleadings and evidence. In this case the pleadings set out very fully the acts and facts which were alleged to constitute negligence in the defendant, and in relation to the liability arising from the use of the “broad-gauge” cars. Did the charge do more than inform the jury that if the wreck was caused by the use of the cars having such known defects as were charged in the petition, then their use would constitute such negligence as would entitle the plaintiff to recover i

If the facts stated in the petition in reference to the defects in the cars and their use, and the further fact that the wreck was caused thereby, be admitted, then we are of the opinion that the court might have declared their use negligence. The facts were not admitted, but it was left to the jury to determine from the evidence whether they existed as charged in the petition.

[171]*171The charge made it necessary to a recovery, not only that there should have been defects which caused the wreck, but that it should further appear that the defendant knew of the defects, or had the means of knowing of them, which by the exercise of care, diligence and caution on its part, would have brought actual knowledge. Whether the defendant had this knowledge, or means of knowledge, was left to the jury to be determined.

If, in any case, it be admitted that a carrier of passengers has notice of a defect in its cars, which are used in trains on which passengers are transported, and that, without curing the defect, it continues to use them, can it be held if a wreck occurs therefrom that it is not the result of the carrier’s negligence? The continued use of such a defective car, with a knowledge of its defect, by which the lives of passengers may be imperiled, is utterly inconsistent with that high degree of care required of passenger carriers, and a court may so instruct a jury.

The court should ordinarily inform the jury what the issues to be tried are, rather than to refer them to the pleadings to ascertain that fact, and in this case we think this was clearly done in the several charges given. The reference made to the pleadings had no bearing upon the weight or character of evidence necessary to be adduced to sustain the issues made, but only went to the point that if the cars were put into the train in the unfit and defective condition alleged in the pleadings, with knowledge on the part of the carrier of such unfitness and defects, then the carrier would be liable for such injury as resulted therefrom.

The reference to the allegations made was for the express purpose of limiting the effect of the more general language now complained of, and to inform the jury that the alleged unfitness or defects must have existed to render the carrier liable on account of having placed the broad-gauge cars in the train. The question in cases of this kind is: Is there reason to believe that the jury were misled by the charge? Looking to the entire charge given, in which negligence of the carrier, its officers, agents and employes, is made the sole ground on which the plaintiffs could recover, we think it highly improbable, if not impossible, for a jury of ordinary intelligence to have understood from the charge that they were authorized, to find for the plaintiffs, if broad-gauge cars were put in the train, without reference to whether they were suitable or unsuitable, defective or not defective.

The fourth assignment of error is: “The court erred in paragraph thirteen of its charge, which reads as follows, and. other parts of its charge of similar effect: ‘If you believe from the evidence that at [172]*172the time of the wreck the deceased, Tetro, was in, and was occupying what is called the baggage or express car, and you believe from the evidence that defendant used said baggage or express car for the use of the public, then the defendant is nevertheless responsible, if the death of the said Tetro was caused by the negligence of defendant or its agents, officers and employes, and plaintiff here can recover.’ Because said charge is inconsistent and contradictory of the instruction immediately preceding same, and other portions of the charge, and was misleading to the jury. Said instruction should have gone farther, and charged the jury in the same connection, that if Tetro was in said car, and being there, occupied a position therein which was obviously dangerous, and one that a prudent man would not have occupied under the circumstances, and was injured or killed by reason thereof, then the plaintiff cannot recover.”

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Bluebook (online)
65 Tex. 167, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-line-red-river-ry-co-v-smith-tex-1885.