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

17 S.W. 133, 81 Tex. 479, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1391
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1891
DocketNo. 6918.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 133 (Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway 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
Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Smith, 17 S.W. 133, 81 Tex. 479, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1391 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

MARR, Judge, Section A.

On the 28th day of May, 1888, the appellee ¡Nettie Smith filed suit in the District Court of Guadalupe County, and alleged that she took passage on the train of appellant at San Antonio on the 9th day of May, 1888, paid the usual fare between said'points, and checked her trunk to Seguin, the point of her destination; that she arrived at the Seguin depot between 5 and 6 o’clock in the afternoon; that the depot at Seguin is situated about one mile from the town proper, and that when she arrived at said depot she did not take charge of her trunk, deeming it unnecessary to do so for so short a stay in Seguin; that said railway company never delivered said trunk to her nor accounted to her for it; that said trunk contained personal property of the value of $988.70, and that the value of said trunk was $20 without its contents. Appellee further alleged that she was damaged in the sum of $500 by interruption of her business, detention in *482 the State, and hotel hills, caus.ed by the failure of appellee to deliver said trunk.

On the 7th day of November, 1888, the appellee filed in said cause a paper indorsed “Plaintiff’s amended plea and for exemplary damages.” This paper was filed as a trial amendment, and alleged that on the 22d day of June, 1888, the appellant made, wrote, published, and filed in this cause a certain slanderous, libelous, vicious writing, as follows: “Are.you (meaning plaintiff) acquainted with Mrs. W-, who was formerly connected with the Sunny South? If so, where is she now, and do you not think she is a charming lady?”

This was a question propounded in a cross-interrogatory to the plaintiff by defendant’s counsel, contained in the depositions of the plaintiff which were filed in the cause. Upon that her counsel predicated a claim for $50,000 as actual and $20,000 as exemplary damages, alleging in substance that the question was wholly irrelevant and impertinent, and was intended to impute to the plaintiff a want of chastity (by innuendo) by intimating and charging that she was an intimate associate or admirer of “Mrs. W-,” who is alleged by the plaintiff to have been of bad repute in this particular, etc. This “plea” upon exceptions of the defendant was stricken out, and this action of the court is made the basis of an earnest cross-assignment of error in behalf of the plaintiff. There was a verdict in her favor for $600, the value of her trunk and its contents. This property was destroyed while in the possession of the defendant’s servants and in its baggage room, at Seguin, Texas, by a fire which consumed the entire depot building on the night of May 9, 1888. The defendant pleaded that the destruction of the property was the act of God and an unavoidable accident, and that it held the same as a warehouseman and was only liable as such, etc. There was evidence that the fire may have been caused by lightning.

1. The defendant specially excepted to the plaintiff’s petition, because it had nowhere alleged that the defendant was or is an incorporated company or duly incorporated, etc., which the court overruled, and this ruling is first assigned as error. The petition does not contain such an averment nor any other tantamount thereto in legal contemplation. The only description of the defendant’s character is that the plaintiff “took passage at San Antonio on the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway,” and that said railway company has an office and local agent in the town of Seguin. Holloway v. Railway, 23 Texas, 465. Whether this defect in the-petition and the action of the corat in holding it to be sufficient constitute a ground for the reversal of the judgment we do not deem it necessary to determine in this case, but would suggest the propriety of an amendment of the petition before another trial to obviate the objection; The almost invariable practice in suits of this character is to allege the corporate capacity of the defendant, and it would seem that if the provision of the statutes on the *483 subject does not positively require such an allegation it certainly contemplates such mode of procedure. The reasons for this averment, if there are no others, are found in its purpose, which is to fix the venue of the suit and to inform the court and its officers upon whom the service of the process should be made, as well as to show the capacity of the defendant to sue and be sued, etc. There are authorities to the effect that it is an indispensable allegation. Ins. Co. v. Davidge, 51 Texas, 244; Railway v. Douglass, 2 Ct. App. C. C., sec. 28; Rev. Stats., arts. 1190, 1198 (secs. 21, 21b), 1223. We have been referred to no general law of this State recognizing “the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company” as an incorporated body. Railway v. Knapp, 51 Texas, 569.

2. We do not think that there was any error in the action of the court as pointed out in the second assignment, as follows: “The court erred in refusing to give the jury the following special charge, viz.: 'The jury are instructed that warehousemen are not responsible for neglect of their servants to rescue goods in the warehouse from destruction by fire in the night when such servants are present but not in the course of their employment.’ ” ' This charge was inapplicable under the evidence, which showed, as we think, that the employes referred to in attempting to extinguish the fire and rescue the property at the depot were acting in the course of their employment and for the defendant, and also were in charge of the buildings and their contents, though not actually present when the fire began. These facts distinguish the present from the case of Aldrich v. Railway, 100 Massachusetts, 31, relied upon by appellant’s counsel.

3. The third and sixth assignments of error, which relate to the same subject, will be considered together, and are as follows respectively, viz.:

“(3) The court erred in refusing to give to the jury the following special instruction asked by appellant, viz.: 'If you believe from the evidence that the trunk and its contents belonging to the plaintiff were duly delivered at the depot of defendant at Seguin, the point of destination, and plaintiff had an opportunity to take possession thereof but did not do so, then the duties of defendant were discharged and said company was no longer liable as a common carrier; and if plaintiff left said trunk to be kept in the baggage room of defendant, while it was so kept defendant was only liable as a warehouseman; and if it was then by the burning of said baggage room destroyed, you Avill look to the evidence to see if defendant was guilty of carelessness or negligence that caused the fire; and if defendant was not guilty of either carelessness or negligence, then defendant is not liable for said loss, and in that event you should find for the defendant.’ ”

“(6) The court erred in failing and refusing by the general charge or by any of the special charges asked by the defendant to charge the *484 jury upon any statement of case that would change the liability of defendant from that of a common carrier to that of a warehouseman.”

Whether these omissions of the court below constitute reversible errors or not will depend, of course, upon the issues in the law as made by the pleadings and arising under the evidence adduced. .

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 133, 81 Tex. 479, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-v-smith-tex-1891.