Grant v. Hass

75 S.W. 342, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 688, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 342 (Grant v. Hass) 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
Grant v. Hass, 75 S.W. 342, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 688, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 162 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This is an action by Hass against the defendant Grant for damages on account of injuries sustained by plaintiff resulting from the discharge of a spring gun, located upon the inclosed premises of the defendant. The amount sued for was $1000.

The defendant Grant in his answer alleged that the spring gun was set out by him in his inclosed field at nighttime for the purpose of protecting his melon crop against thieves; that previous to that time his melon patch had been depredated upon and melons stolen; that he guarded the melon patch in daytime, and only set out the gun at night; that the gun was set in a position-to fire across the patch,—a wire was attached to the trigger running across the melon patch. The gun was loaded with powder and small shot, the range of which would not extend beyond the premises of the defendant; that he exercised proper caution and care in setting out the gun, and that his purpose and intention was that it should only be discharged at those who might be stealing his melons in the nighttime; that he removed the gun during the day; that plaintiff was guilty of negligence in going upon his premises, and', in putting himself in a position to be shot; that he was shot in the nighttime, when he had invaded the premises for the purpose of stealing the melons.

A verdict and judgment were in favor of the plaintiff for $60. The charge of the trial court is as follows :

“1. If from the evidence in this case you believe that on the 24th day of July, 1901, the defendant J. H. Grant set upon his inclosed land *689 ot premises a gun charged with gunpowder and shot and 'that he attached to the trigger of said gun a wire which he laid along or across defendant’s melon patch in such manner as to conceal the wire, and in such manner that one walking across said melon patch might strike said wire with the foot and thereby discharge said gun, and with the intent on the part of defendant Grant that anyone trespassing on his said melon patch would strike said wire and discharge said gun; and if from the evidence you further believe that plaintiff A. Hass did on July M, 1901, enter the inclosed premises of the defendant, and did strike said wire attached to the gun with his foot and thereby discharged the same, and was in consequence shot by said gun and injured; and if from the evidence you further believe that if from the time plaintiff Hass entered defendant’s said inclosed land he did not know that said gun was so set and wired, and that he did not know that defendant Grant guarded and protected his melon patch with spring or wired gun or that he kept such guns on his said premises; and if from the evidence you further believe that said trespass by plaintiff upon the inclosed premises of defendant was in the daytime (as that term is hereinafter defined), or if from the evidence you believe that said trespass on said inclosure was in the nighttime (as that term is hereinafter defined), but said entry into said inclosure at nighttime, if it was at was at night, was not with intent on the part of plaintiff to steal defendant’s melons, then you will find for plaintiff Hass. But if from the evidence you believe that said entry of plaintiff Hass upon said inclosure of defendant was in the nighttime, and with intent to steal the melons of defendant ; and if from the evidence you believe .that at the time he was shot by said spring gun or wired gun, if shot, he. was in the act of stealing defendant’s melon or melons, then you will find for the defendant Grant.

“2. By the terms 'daytime’ and 'nighttime,’ as used in this charge, is meant first by 'daytime’ any time from thirty minutes before sunrise to thirty minutes after sunset; and by 'nighttime,’ any time from thirty minutes after sunset to thirty minutes before sunrise.

"3. You are further instructed that if from the evidence you believe that at the time plaintiff Hass entered upon defendant’s inclosed land he knew that defendant kept a spring or wired gun on his premises to guard and protect his melon patch from depredators, then you will find for defendant.”

The balance of the charge is on the measure of damages, about which there is no complaint.

It appears from the facts that the defendant’s field, wherein the melon patch was situated, was inclosed by a fence, and through it was no public or usually traveled road or highway; that the melon patch was some little distance from his residence, and that -the year previous and the year that plaintiff was injured his patch had been depredated upon and melons stolen during the nighttime. The plaintiff made some effort *690 to guard the patch during the day, and the night that the injury occurred he set out a spring gun loaded with powder and small shot, near the melon patch, with the muzzle pointing across the same. To the trigger of the gun was attached a wire, which extended across the melon patch upon or near the ground, in such a position that one going between the gun and the end of the wire would strike the latter, and cause a discharge of the gun. The defendant’s corn field was near the patch, and in it the gun was placed. The defendant put out the gun for the purpose of protecting his melon crop from thieves. He only placed it out at night and removed it in the daytime. Previous to putting out the gun he had notified some of his neighbors that he intended to protect his melons by means of a spring gun; but the plaintiff, before he entered the melon patch and was injured, had no notice or knowledge of the existence of the gun, nor did he know that the defendant guarded his patch by such means. The defendant was not' present when the gun was fired, nor did he arrive on the scene until after.

The plaintiff with some members of his family was in camp near the fence of the defendant’s field; and early on the morning of July 25, 1901, wishing to see the defendant about some guinea fowls and grass seeds, and get directions from him as to the road he should take to another place which he desired to visit, he started to the defendant’s house, climbed the fence into the defendant’s field, which was the nearest way from that point to the defendant’s residence, when in walking through the field, close to the edge of the corn, with defendant’s melon patch on his right, and between the same and the corn field, his foot struck the wire attached to the gun, which caused it to discharge, and about 300 shot struck and penetrated the plaintiff. The plaintiff did •not see the wire nor the gun until after its discharge and he had received its contents. The gun was loaded with small shot, the range of which would not extend beyond the private grounds and premises of the defendant.

The evidence is conflicting as to the exact time that the gun was discharged and the plaintiff received its contents. According to his evidence it was in the daytime, as day time is defined by the charge of the court. According to the evidence offered by the defendant, the discharge of the gun was early in the morning, but in the nighttime, as defined by the charge of the court.

The evidence warrants a conclusion that the plaintiff in entering the defendant’s field did so for the purpose stated by him in his testimony, without any intention to steal the defendant’s melons, but was merely walking through the field to the defendant’s house, in order to see him about the matters testified to by the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 342, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 688, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-hass-texapp-1903.