Houston East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Granberry

40 S.W. 1062, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 391, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 1062 (Houston East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Granberry) 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
Houston East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Granberry, 40 S.W. 1062, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 391, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 232 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

ELY,

Associate Justice.—Mrs. Granberry instituted suit against the Western Union Telegraph Company, the Houston & Shreveport Bailroad Company, and the Houston East & West Texas Bailway Company, for the recovery of. $1995 damages alleged to have accrued by reason of failure to promptly -transmit and deliver a telegram conveying to her intelligence of the illness of her husband. It was alleged that the railway companies owned telegraph lines and were partners, the facts being fully pleaded which show that they were associated in business as partners. The cause was tried with a jury, and resulted in a verdict for Mrs. Gran-berry as against the railway companies, but in favor of the Western Union Telegraph Company. Ho negligence was shown as to the Western Union Telegraph Company. • -

The court gave the following charge:- “Mrs. Granberry pleads that-two of - the- defendants, the Houston East & West Texas Bailway Company and the -Houston & Shreveport Bailway Company, are partners, and each *393 liable for the negligence of the other. This partnership is denied under oath by said two named defendants. The general rule is that the defendants would not be liable except each for injuries occurring on its own line; but if there was a partnership between the two defendants, or if either of said defendant companies owned, operated, leased, contracted, or dominated the other, or if there was an agreement between said companies that they were to be operated by the same persons, having their offices at the same place and under an agreement to divide the profits, and that the railroad and telegraph line was one continuous line, then each company would be liable to the plaintiff, without any regard to which line or on which line the negligence, if any, occurred.

“Now if you believe from the evidence that the Houston East & West Texas and the Houston & Shreveport Railway Companies, as railways and telegraph- companies, on April 14, 15, and 16, 1894, were continuous lines on either railways or telegraph companies for the public for hire as to either railway or telegraph business from Shreveport, La., to Houston, Texas, and that said companies, as either telegraph or railway companies, run through trains without change of crews, ears, or servants, or transmitted telegraph messages without any change, break, or repeating thereof at Logansport, and if you believe from the evidence that the agents, servants, and employes of the Houston East & West Texas Railway Company or the'Houston & Shreveport Railway Company acted for and served the other company, or that moneys, the receipts for either passengers or freight or telegraph, charged, collected, or earned in Louisiana, were sent to the agent of the Houston East & West Texas Railway Company, or to the agent of said company, who was at the time acting for and was employed by the Houston & Shreveport Railway Company and the Houston East & West Texas Railway Company at Houston in the same capacity for both companies; and if you further believe from the evidence that the two companies were operated or conducted by the same agents, servants, and employers or officers, and that all moneys received by through business on said railway and telegraph lines were sent to and put into the common fund, and at stated periods said companies, by and through the same officers, agents, servants, or employes, settled with each other, and thereby each of said companies, the Houston East & West Texas and the Houston & Shreveport Companies, received its pro rata part of said money so earned or had, and you further believe from the evidence that any officer of either company had the right to employ or discharge the employes of or on the other line or company, and if you further believe that the railway or telegraph line from Shreveport to Houston, was operated as one line by the same general manager, officers, or employes throughout, with the general offices of both companies at Houston, Texas, then I charge you, if you so believe and find from the evidence, that in law this would make each company liable for the acts of the other company, without regard to which company was actually negligent, if either was so negligent.v

The above instruction is attacked on the ground that it is upon the weight of the testimony, and that it gives undue prominence to certain *394 details of the evidence. All of «the facts bearing upon the question of joint liability of the two railroad companies were uncontradicted. The charge informs the jury that if the facts were proved, they established a joint liability. It is not contended by appellants that they do not, but that to enumerate them was a charge on the weight of the testimony. Ho point mentioned in the charge was assumed to have been proved, but each one is left for the jury to find, and then they are told if all the facts áre found to be true, joint liability had been established. Every point bearing upon the- question of joint liability was presented in the charge, and proof of all of them was made essential to establish such liability. The charge merely declared the legal effect of uncontradicted evidence. Jacobs v. Totty, 76 Texas, 343; Anderson v. Martindale, 61 Texas, 188.

Partnership was properly defined by the court, and there was no error in refusing to give the definition asked by appellants. The charge asked by appellants was not correct, in that it made partnership between the roads hinge on the sharing of profits arising from transmitting the telegram to Mrs. Cranberry. The partnership did not depend on this fact alone, but upon the general facts connecting the two parties in their business affairs.

It was not error to permit the witness Carter, who had for a number of years worked for the two railroad companies, to testify that the two lines of railway and telegraph were operated by the Houston East & West Texas Railway Company. He swore to a fact that was substantially testified to by all the witnesses on the subject.

The court gave the following charge: “The defendant the Houston & Shreveport Railroad Company pleads that the damages sued for could not be recovered by the plaintiff in the courts of Louisiana, as the negligence, if any, occurred in that State. On this point I charge you that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the damage she sues for under the laws of Louisiana. If you find from the evidence that the Louisiana corporation, the Houston Railroad Company, was guilty of such negligence in the transmission or delivery of said telegram as would, under" the charge and the evidence, show said Houston & Shreveport Railroad Company to be liable.” We take it for granted that the paragraph should be punctuated so as to make' one sentence of the last two sentences, and doing so, the objection that there is a peremptory instruction for Mrs. Cranberry is avoided. But a more serious error in the charge which presents itself, is the instruction that if negligence upon the part of the Louisiana company was proved, that “the plaintiff is entitled to recover the damages she sues for.” Mrs. Cranberry sued for $1995, and the jury returned a verdict for that identical sum. The effect of the charge was to deprive them of the privilege of fixing the amount of damages sustained by reason of the negligence. We can not say that the jury could not have returned any different verdict under the evidence. They might have returned a verdict for any sum under the amount sued for.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 1062, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 391, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-east-west-texas-railway-co-v-granberry-texapp-1897.