Mexican National Railway Co. v. Jackson

31 L.R.A. 276, 33 S.W. 857, 89 Tex. 107, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 327
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1896
DocketNo. 358.
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 31 L.R.A. 276 (Mexican National Railway Co. v. Jackson) 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
Mexican National Railway Co. v. Jackson, 31 L.R.A. 276, 33 S.W. 857, 89 Tex. 107, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 327 (Tex. 1896).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The plaintiff in error is a corporation Operating a line of railroad in the Republic of Mexico, which extends into the State of Texas. The defendant in error was in the employ of that railroad company in the Republic of Mexico, and while engaged in the performance of duties as such employee was injured at the station of La Ventura, in the said Republic. The injuries received were serious and of a'permanent nature. The injury was caused by the negligence of the conductor, who was the vice principal of the railroad company.

The defendant below, by special plea, set up and pleaded the laws of Mexico in such cases, alleging that the contract of service was entered into in that Republic, and the injury occurred within the Republic of Mexico; that it was entitled to an adjudication under those laws, which are so dissimilar to the laws of Texas that the courts of this State ought not to undertake to adjudicate them, and that the defendant still owned and operated its line of railroad in Mexico, and was subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of that country: ,f

Proof was made of the laws of Mexico, from which we copy the following articles as being material to the determination of the question involved:

“Art.- 72. Congress has power: * * XXII. To enact laws governing general lines of communication, and governing postoffices and mails.”

*109 “Art. 4. A crime is the voluntary infraction of a penal law, doing that which it prohibits or neglecting to' do that which it commands.”

“Art. 5. A misdemeanor is the infraction of police regulations or proclamations and good government.”

“Art. 6. There are intentional crimes and crimes resulting from neglect.”

“Art. 11. Negligent crimes exist—I. Where an act is done or a duty omitted which, although lawful in itself, is not so by reason of its consequences, if the accused fails to provide against such consequences through negligence, want of reflection, or care, by not making proper investigations, by not taking necessary precautions. * * *”

“HI. Where the question relates to an act which is punishable solely by reason of the circumstances under which it is done, or by reason of a circumstance personal to the party aggrieved, if the accused is ignorant of such circumstances through not having previously made the investigations which the duty of his profession or the importance of the case demands.”

“Art. 301. The civil liability arising from an act or omission contrary to a penal law consists in the obligation imposed on the party liable to make (1) Bestitution, (2) Separation, (3) Indemnization, and (4) Payment of Judicial Expenses.”

“Art 304. Beparation comprehends: the payment of all the damages caused to the injured party, to his family or to a third person, with the violation of a right which is formal, existing and not simply possible, if such damages are actual, and arise directly and immediately from the act or omission complained of, or there be a certainty that such act or omission must necessarily cause, as a proximate and inevitable result.”

“Art. 305. Indemnization imports: the payment of damages, that is, that which the injured party fails to enjoy as a direct and immediate consequence of an act or omission by which a formal, existing, and not merely possible right is attacked, and of the value of the fruits of the thing usurped and already consumed, in the cases in which the same should be done conformably with civil right.”

“Art. 306. The condition required by the two preceding articles, that the damages and injuries should be actual, shall not prevent that the indemnization of subsequent damages and injuries be exacted by a new suit, when they shall have accrued, if they proceed directly from, and as a necessary consequence of, the same act or omission from which resulted the previous damages or injuries.”

“Art. 307. The payment of judicial expenses solely embraces those absolutely necessary, which the injured party incurs for the purpose of investigating the act or omission which causes the criminal proceeding, and to avail himself of his rights in such proceeding or in the civil suit.”

“Art. 308. The civil responsibility can not be declared except at the instance of the party entitled to recover.”

“Art. 309. The judges who adjudicate upon the civil responsibility *110 •shall he controlled by the provisions of this title, in so far as its provisions extend; on other questions they shall follow, according to the nature of the suit, the provisions of the civil or of the commercial laws which may be in effect at the time of the happening of the act or omission causing the civil responsibility.”

“Art. 310. The right to. civil responsibility forms part of the estate of a decedent and descends to his heirs and successors, provided it be not the case of the following article, or that it arise from injury or defamation and that, the offended person having been able in his lifetime to bring his suit, he neither did so nor directed his heirs to sue; in such case the offense shall be understood as remitted.”

“Art. 311. The act to enforce civil responsibility demanding support of a person guilty of homicide is personal, and belongs exclusively to the persons named in the end of article 318, as directly damaged. Consequently, such action forms no part of the estate of the deceased, nor is it extinguished although the latter pardon the offense in life.”

“Art. 313. The judges who take cognizance of suits based upon civil responsibility shall endeavor that the amount and terms of payment be fixed by agreement of the parties. Failing in this, the provisions of the following articles shall be observed.”

“Art. 321. In case of blows or wounds from which the injured party ■does not remain crippled, lamed or deformed, he shall have the right that the responsible party pay him til expenses of cure, the damages he may have suffered, and that which he may fail to gain during the time which in the opinion of competent persons he may not be able to do the work by which he subsisted. But it is essential that the inability to work should be the direct result of the wounds or blows, or of a •cause which is the immediate effect of such blows or wounds.”

“Art. 322. If the inability of the injured party to devote himself to his accustomed work be permanent, from the moment in which he shall recover and can properly devote himself to other and different work, which shall be lucrative and appropriate to his education, habits, social position and physical constitution, the civil responsibility shall be reduced to paying him the sum which his ability to earn in his new employment falls short of his daily earnings in his former occupation.”

“Art. 323. If the blows or wounds cause the loss of any member not indispensable for work, or the person wounded or struck remain otherwise crippled, lamed or deformed, by that circumstance he shall have the right not only to the damages and injuries, but also to the sum which the judge may determine as extraordinary indemnity, considering the social position and sex of the person and the part of the body remaining crippled, lamed or deformed.”

“Art. 324.

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Bluebook (online)
31 L.R.A. 276, 33 S.W. 857, 89 Tex. 107, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mexican-national-railway-co-v-jackson-tex-1896.