Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Gardner

266 S.W. 809
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1924
DocketNo. 6780.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 266 S.W. 809 (Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Gardner) 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
Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Gardner, 266 S.W. 809 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

McCLENDON, C. J.

The appellees, Mrs. T. A. Gardner and her husband, T. A.’ Gardner, recovered a judgment in the district court of Lampasas county against appellant, Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway Company, for 815,000 as compensatory damages for personal injuries which Mrs. Gardner sustained as a result of stepping into a hole at a point where Elm street crosses the right of way of appellant in the town of Lometa. The appeal is from this judgment.- The case is briefed under 10 propositions, supported by 15 assignments of error, which we will consider in the order of their presentation.

The first 4 propositions are predicated up *810 on the theory that under the uncontradicted evidence there was no duty resting upon appellant to keep the street in repair at the point where Mrs. Gardner was injured. The facts in this regard follow:

The land on which the town of Lometa is situated was formerly owned by appellant. In 1885 appellant’s line was extended through Lampasas county, and in 18S6 appellant caused to be recorded in Lampasas county a plat of the town under the name of Mont-vale. TJiis plat embraced a rectangular tract of land, intersected by the railway right of way which ran approximately north and south. This right of way was 200 feet wide, and was designated on the plat by dotted lines. Immediately adjoining the right of way on each side were streets, named, respectively, East Railway and West Railway; to the east and west of these streets the town site was platted into lots and blocks, the streets running north and south, parallel with the railway right of way, and east and west at right angles to it. The plat did not show that any of the streets crossed the right of way. The town of Montvale was later incorporated, and the incorporation afterwards abandoned. After this the town was incorporated under the name of Lometa. The facts show, without contradiction, that none of the streets in the town crossed the railway right of way except Main street, which was south of appellant’s depot, and Elm street, which was north of the depot. The main portion of the town was west of the track. Elm street was shown, without controversy, to be a regularly traveled public street, and had been such for many years, just how long the evidence does not show, but the witnesses testifying thereto show, withput controversy, that as early as 1912 practically the same condition existed as at the present. The railway company had placed crossing signs •where Elm street crossed its right of way, and had graded and graveled the street at this point. Elm street, as shown by the plat, was 80 feet wide, but there were no sidewalks across the railway right of way, and the evidence showed that pedestrians and vehicles used the traveled part of the roadway indiscriminately.

Appellant contends that Revised Statutes,. art. 1068, which imposes the duty upon railway companies to place and keep that portion of their right of way over and across which any public street of any incorporated town or village may run, in proper condition for the use of the traveling public, is limited in its application to such portions of such right of way as has been condemned by the city for street purposes. This contention is based upon the caption to the original act (Laws of 1897, p. 216), which states the purpose of the act to be to authorize the condemnation of rights of way and “to define the duties of railroad companies when their roadbeds and rights of way are condemned for street purposes.”- The language of'article 1068 is certainly not ambiguous nor open to construction, and, in concluding that as originally passed it had application only to such portion of the right of way as has been actually condemned, the question arises whether (conceding that in so far as it applies to the right of way where it is not condemned it is in conflict with the caption) it must be construed as limited by the caption or held unconstitutional in so far as it exceeds the purpose stated in the caption. If the article is to be construed as being limited in its meaning by the caption and as having read into it the expression, “when their roadbeds and rights of way are condemned for street purposes,” then it would seem to follow, as contended by appellant, that the inclusion of the article in the Revised Statutes in the exact language of the original bill was merely a continuation of the article with the construction which should be given to it as originally passed. On the other hand, if the section was originally unconstitutional in so far as it exceeded the purpose designated in the caption, then its embodiment in the Revised Statutes constituted a re-enactment, and it should be construed without reference to the caption of the original act.

In the case of American Indemnity Co. v. Austin, 112 Tex. 251, 246 S. W. 1019; the Supreme Court, speaking through Chief Justice Cureton, uses the following language:

“To. say that the citizen, in order to know the law by which his rights are to be determined, must go through the many volumes of session laws enacted by nearly forty different Legislatures, and examine the original acts, including the captions and repealing acts and clauses, is not to be seriously considered. The Roman citizen who had to read only 3,000 plates of brass, on which his laws were recorded, had, as compared to this, an easy undertaking. The session laws are for all practical purposes inaccessible to the .average citizen, and the task of searching through them to ascertain the law an insurmountable one. These laws, as republished by Gammel, down to 1919 occupy nineteen huge volumes, aggregating approximately thirty thousand pages. And yet, unless the Revised Statutes constitute the law — are the law— citizens and courts alike will be compelled to seek it in the session acts of the Legislature.
“But the Revised Statutes, as we have seen, are the law, and are to be looked to with safety and confidence by the citizen; nor need one, under the rules of construction shown in the authorities- cited, look into the original acts, except to explain ambiguities in the Code. The Revised Statutes of this state, when once adopted, become the entire law on the subjects they purport to cover, unless specially excepted, and any inquiry into matters of legislative procedure by which the original session acts were adopted, for the purpose of impeaching the constitutional integrity of that procedure, is wholly inadmissible.”

It'would seem that this language is peculiarly applicable to the present controversy. The article under discussion is certainly *811 plain, -unambiguous, and not open to construction. To construe it now with reference to tbe original act would result in its being given a limited meaning wbicb its language does not even suggest. One reading tbe article in the Revised Statutes would never suspect that it has application only to tbe right of way wbicb has been condemned, and could give it no other interpretation than that it applies generally to all public street crossings. We are inclined to tbe view that, in so far as tbe article may be construed in conflict with tbe caption, it should be held unconstitutional rather than that its meaning should be limited by tbe caption, and therefore that its embodiment in the Revised Statutes constituted a re-enactment of the article without reference to the original caption.

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266 S.W. 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-c-s-f-ry-co-v-gardner-texapp-1924.