Hays v. Houston G. N. R. R. Co.

46 Tex. 272
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 46 Tex. 272 (Hays v. Houston G. N. R. R. Co.) 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
Hays v. Houston G. N. R. R. Co., 46 Tex. 272 (Tex. 1876).

Opinion

Gould, Associate Justice.

Appellant brought this suit to recover damages for personal injuries received, and the violation of Ms rights as a passenger, in the alleged malicious, forcible, and wrongful act of defendant, by its agent, the conductor, in ejecting Mm from the cars. He claimed that he was rightfully on the cars; that the act of the conductor m expelling him was wrongful, was accomplished m a rude and insulting manner, and by personal violence, resulting in injuries to Ms clothing and bruises to Ms person, and was [277]*277further aggravated by being done in the presence of, and to the great terror of plaintiff’s wife and children, and by putting him off in the woods, and not at a usual stopping place. In an amended petition, he alleged that the defendant not only authorized the conductor to commit the grievances complained of, but did, after the commission thereof, ratify, confirm, justify, and adopt said acts.

Exceptions were taken and sustained to so much of the petition as set up the distress of the plaintiff’s wife and chib dren, because of his expulsion, and them belief at the time that he was seriously hurt. In addition to the general denial, there was -a special answer, alleging that the plaintiff, with his wife, five children, a lady companion, and a servant, entered the cars, on the tacit condition that he would pay, when demanded, the usual rates of fare, of which public notice had been given, and of which he knew, amounting to six dollars, (or tickets;) that when the fare was properly demanded, he presented only five tickets, and refused to pay the additional fare due, asserting that he would pay no more, and that neither he nor any of his company would get off, unless put off by force; and that after repeated demands, the conductor, with the use of no more force than was necessary, and without any malice or oppression, laid hands on him and conducted him off the cars at a usual stopping place. The result of the trial was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $100, actual damages.

The plaintiff moved for a new trial, on the ground that the damages allowed were too small; that the verdict should have been for exemplary damages; that the court erred in refusing instructions asked, and in the charge-as given, and in giving in part a verbal preliminary charge, and also in the admission and exclusion of evidence. His motion being overruled, the plaintiff has brought the case here by appeal.

Evidently, the only questions that need be considered are those bearing on the amount of damages, and as it has not been argued here that this court should reverse the case, on the [278]*278ground simply that the jury should have allowed larger or vindictive damages, it is only necessary to inquire whether the court committed any error affecting the amount of plaintiff’s recovery.

There are nineteen assignments' of error, but it is believed that the questions involved are really but few, and may be discussed and disposed of without attempting to follow then-assignments. It appears by bill of exceptions, that after the parties had announced themselves ready for trial, and the court proceeded to pass upon defendant’s exceptions to the petition, and had overruled the same, except in the particular already stated, that the plaintiff tendered an amended petition, in which he again gave a full statement of his cause of action. The court refused to receive it, because offered too late. It is sufficient to say that it was within the discretion of the court whether it would permit an amendment not rendered necessary by its rulings at that stage of the trial, and that it does not appear that that discretion was abused. But the action of the court, even if erroneous, did not affect the plaintiff injuriously. His pleadings were sufficient to allow evidence of every fact material to the full presentation of his ease. The only evidence offered by him and excluded was, as to whether the conductor, when he called for the fare, had on his hat the badge required by the statute. It is not perceived how that fact could, if proved, have increased the amount of damages. For the same reason, it is not material to inquire whether the court erred in its instructions on the subject of what was a usual stopping place, nor, indeed, whether there was any error in the charge, submitting that to the jury as a question of fact, unless it was such as might have misled the jury as to the amount' of their verdict. By that verdict, they find that the act of expulsion was wrongful, and they further find what were the actual damages to plaintiff from that wrongful act. So much of the charge as hears only on the right of the plaintiff to be on the cars, and the right of the conductor to eject him, need not [279]*279be reviewed. Eo specific error is pointed out in the assignments of error, or otherwise, in the instructions, as to what might be considered in estimating actual damages. The jury-are told to estimate the actual damages by the “injuries sustained by the plaintiff in his person, his estate, and his feelings,” and are told that they may look to the plaintiff’s “ situation in life, his reputation in the community, and any circumstances which may appear from the proof to have attended the (acts) complained of,” but not to take into account “ the wealth of the defendant or the poverty of the .plaintiff.” W e think that the subject of the amount of actual damages was fairly placed before the jury.

On the subject of exemplary damages, the jury are told, “that in cases of malice, or a wanton disregard of the rights of others, in violation of law, the jury may, in such cases, in addition to actual damages, go further, and, in the exercise of a sound discretion, assess such further damages as they may deem just as a punishment for this malicious intent, or this wanton disregard of the rights of others, and this, with regard to corporations as well as individuals.”

The right of the plaintiff to recover exemplary damages, however, is made to depend on the question of whether he was rightfully on the train or not.

That view of the law is stated repeatedly; but the following extract from the charge will suffice to present the views of the presiding judge: “It is a rule of law, that a party seeking legal redress, must show his adversary in the wrong, and must show himself in the right, and that no negligence of his own has tended to increase or consummate the injury. But if the plaintiff was rightfully on the train, by payment of fare, or right to ride free, conferred by proper authority, and the conductor was actuated by a wicked intent to do the plaintiff an injury, or did the act in a spirit of wanton disregard of the plaintiff, and with the use of insulting words, then the jury-will be warranted in assessing exemplary damages; other[280]*280wise, in such eases, they will confine themselves to an estimate of the actual damages sustained by the plaintiff.”

As we are of the opinion that, under the evidence, the case was not one in which exemplary damages could have been allowed, it does not become necessary to inquire into the correctness of this charge.

In expressing this opinion, we do not mean to say whether, if the conductor himself had been defendant, he might or might not have been so punished. The evidence, as to the nature of his acts, was, to some extent, conflicting, and it is not necessary to pass upon it.

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46 Tex. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-v-houston-g-n-r-r-co-tex-1876.