Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Moore

49 Tex. 31
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 49 Tex. 31 (Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Moore) 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
Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Moore, 49 Tex. 31 (Tex. 1878).

Opinion

Moore, Associate Justice.

It is obvious, from an inspec[44]*44tion of the record, that this action was brought under the act of February 2,1862, authorizing the heirs, representatives, or relatives of deceased persons to sue for and recover damages, when the death of the ancestor, relative, testator, or intestate has been caused or occasioned by the negligence, culpable or wrongful act of another; or at least that it was so treated and regarded in the court below. Evidently, there is a manifest difference in respect to the parties by whom the action may be maintained, and the character of damages which may be recovered, when the suit is under the Constitution instead of the statute. (Paschal’s Dig., art. 15, et seq.;.Const. 1869, art. 12, sec. 30.) That there is no such conflict, however,'between. the provisions of the statute and Constitution, so that the former is abrogated by the latter, seems to be decided, by the majority of the court, in the case of Houston and Texas Central Railway Co. v. Bradley, (guardian, &c.,) 45 Tex., 171; although it is said in-the opinion that “the effect of the constitutional provision on the act of 1862 is not raised by the pleadings, and not discussed in the briefs.” That action, however, like the present one, though based upon the statute, was brought after the adoption of the Constitution. If the statute was repealed by the Constitution, whether the effect of such repeal had been raised in the pleading or discussed in the briefs or not, as there would have been no authority of law for such an action as authorized by the statute, the judgment could not have been affirmed. The point in the mind of the judge by whom the opinion was prepared, to which reference is had in the remark which I have quoted, relates, I suppose, to a question which might have been made in that case, touching the right of parties entitled to an action under the Constitution as well as the statute, to recover in the same suit exemplary damages as well, as such as are given by the statute.

But if we concede that a recovery might be had in olio action for all such damages as a party may be entitled to, either under the Constitution or statute, and that separate [45]*45and consecutive .actions may be maintained by the different parties named in the Constitution, as appellee did sue for or recover exemplary damages, whether the court below erred in its ruling upon appellant’s exceptions, or whether the judgment in appellee’s favor for the entire damages assessed by the jury, leaving appellant, in the opinion of the presiding judge, subject to other actions of like character by the children of the deceased husband, must be determined by reference to the statute upon which, as we have said, the action and judgment are based.

The plain and obvious purpose and effect of the statute are to give to the parties therein named an action similar in character to that which might have been maintained by the party injured if death had not ensued, when death ensues by the means or under the circumstances indicated in it. But, as counsel for appellant says, “the act pregnantly negatives the construction which would .authorize a succession of independent actions by the several parties entitled.” Unquestionably, it may be brought by all or any one of the parties; but whether brought by one or all, it is brought for the sole and exclusive benefit of the surviving husband, wife, child or children, and parents of the deceased, who are alive at the date of the recovery. If the suit is brought by only one of the parties entitled, and he dies pending the action, it does not abate, but it may be prosecuted to judgment in the name or names of some one or more of the parties entitled. Unquestionably, all parties entitled to share in the recovery may, and no doubt should, more appropriately join in the suit; but if some of them fail or neglect doing so, any one of them may maintain and prosecute it; but he must do so for the benefit of the other parties as well as himself. . If a recovery is had, whether the suit is brought by one or all, the amount-recovered “shall be divided amongst the persons entitled under the act, or such of them as shall then be alive, in such shares as the jury shall find and direct.”

To enable the jury to make this division, where all parties [46]*46entitled have not, joined in the suit, the petition should show all amongst whom the amount recovered should be divided; and the judgment should award to. each of the parties for whose benefit the action is brought, the share as found and directed by the jury. When it appears, from an inspection of the petition, that it does not contain the proper averments to enable the court to distribute the damages as contemplated by the statute, it is subject to exception; and when the facts are sufficiently exhibited by. the pleading, but the judgment fails to divide the damages assessed by the jury among the parties as directed by the statute, it is error.

It is also insisted, by the appellant, that the judgment is erroneous and should be reversed, because appellee’s husband, when injured, was not a passenger, but was, as he well knew, wrongfully on appellant’s cars.

It appears, on the face of appellee’s petition, that the deceased, when he received the injuries which caused his death, was on a freight train. The evidence shows that- there was no person on said train but the employés of appellant, except the deceased, wrho had been an engine-driver, running a train on appellant’s road for a year or two, until about a month or six weeks previous to his death, and well knew that passengers were not allowed to travel on freight trains on appellant’s road; that the officers in charge of such trains were forbidden to allow parties to ride upon them without a special pass from the general superintendent of the road; that no such pass could be gotten without a release of appel•lant from damages in case of accident; that this was the condition upon which permits to ride upon freight trains were given, because of the greater risk of accidents to passengers on freight trains than on passenger trains, and because the company would not assume such risks on behalf of persons desiring to travel in this unusual and extra-hazardous manner.

- On the other hand, it cannot be doubted that deceased was riding on the train with the knowledge and consent of the [47]*47conductor. But whether he paid fare, or had a pass or permit to travel on a freight train, is not shown.

Under this state of case, the question to be determined, is whether appellant had assumed the risk of a common carrier of passengers in respect to the deceased, while thus riding upon its freight train; or, in other words, whether deceased was, in "contemplation of law, a passenger on appellant’s train; or if not such passenger, strictly speaking, whether the assent of the conductor to Ms getting upon the train gave him the right to ride upon it, and render appellant responsible for any injury done him while thus on the train, to which he in no manner contributed.

Appellant, as a railway company, is a common carrier of both freight and passengers; but has, unquestionably, the right to make reasonable regulations for conducting its business; and parties dealing with it must conform to such regulations. That a regulation of a railway company, that freight and passengers will be carried on its road in separate trains, is a reasonable regulation, can hardly be doubted by any one. Indeed, it seems a highly salutary regulation, for the public as well as the company.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Tex. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-texas-central-railway-co-v-moore-tex-1878.