Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Edwards

32 L.R.A. 825, 36 S.W. 430, 90 Tex. 65, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 433
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 32 L.R.A. 825 (Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Edwards) 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
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Edwards, 32 L.R.A. 825, 36 S.W. 430, 90 Tex. 65, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 433 (Tex. 1896).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

Mollie Edwards, a minor suing by her next-friend, brought this action against the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway Company of Texas to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant company. The negligence was alleged to consist in keeping a yard in which children were accustomed to play, and in piling a number of railroad bridge ties in such manner that they fell upon the plaintiff while playing upon them and injured her.

The facts disclosed by the testimony are as follows: The defendant, company owned a lumber yard, which was used for the purpose of storing bridge material and other like lumber. It was fenced, except upon one side along the company’s railroad tracks. The plaintiff at the time of the accident was about eight years old, and lived with her mother just across an alley from the yard. Not being fenced along the track, the yard was easily accessible. It was shown that the plaintiff and other *69 children were accustomed to resort there for the purpose of playing, hut it was also shown that they were uniformly ordered out by the servants of the company. The parents of some of them were also warned to keep them away. It appeared however that, notwithstanding the persistent efforts of the servants of the company, the children would return. Just before the accident happened the plaintiff was sent home by the watchman and went out; but as soon as he was called away by other duties she returned. In attempting to climb upon the pile of bridge-ties one of them fell down and crushed her toes. There was evidence tending to show that the ties were insecurely stacked. The mother of the plaintiff testified, in effect, that she knew of the plaintiff’s having visited the yard on former occasions and had punished her several times for it.

There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the trial court, which judgment was affirmed in the Court of Civil Appeals. The case comes to this court upon a petition for a writ of error, which has been granted.

The errors assigned in the Court of Civil Appeals and which are insisted upon in this court are upon the charge of the court and upon the refusal to give certain special instructions requested in behalf of the defendant. But in the view we take of the case, no critical examination of the charges is necessary. Two of the requested instructions were, in our opinion, statements of the law of the case as applied to the facts in evidence, and should have been given. They were as follows:

(1) . “Defendant was under no obligation to keep watch over its premises, in order to exclude children therefrom. If the watchman of defendant discovered plaintiff, with others, playing in the yard, shortly before the accident, and requested them to leave, and plaintiff thereupon withdrew from the premises, but thereafter returned without the knowledge of defendant’s watchman or person in charge of its property, for the purpose of playing in the yard, and while so doing was injured, without such watchman having knowledge of her being then present, and while playing there pulled down upon herself or caused to fall a tie or portion of a pile of ties, upon which she was climbing, defendant would not be liable to plaintiff by reason of any injury so received.”

(2) . “Defendant was under no obligation to plaintiff -to keep its lumber yard in safe or proper condition for plaintiff to play thereon. The yards were its property and it was entitled, as to plaintiff, to use them for piling lumber and to pile the same in such form as it found convenient, with due regard to the safety of such persons only as might properly use the yards. It was under no obligations to so pile or place its bridge ties as to prevent injury by a child climbing upon them, or to so pile, fasten or brace the same that the child could not, in trying to climb thereon, pull one or more of them down upon herself, nor can it be held negligent for failing to so pile, brace or secure them, if the injured person was at the time thereon without its knowledge or invitation.”

Ordinarily the owner of property is not bound to keep it in such con *70 dition as to protect trespassers upon it from danger. Liability may be incurred by making an excavation upon ones own land sufficiently near a street or highway that another may in the exercise of reasonable care fall into it, or by exposing dangerous machinery or appliances in or near some public place, whereby one without fault on his part may be injured. Especially in the latter case may liability be incurred when children are the victims. Until they have learned some discretion, they cannot be held guilty of contributory negligence. Lynch v. Nurdin, 1 Q. B., 29, is a case of this class. There the “defendant negligently left a cart unattended; the plaintiff, a child of seven, got upon the cart in play; another child incautiously led the horse on, and the plaintiff was thereby thrown down and hurt. It was held the plaintiff' could recover.” There are numerous American decisions which proceed upon the same principle. With reference to children there is still another class of .cases which go a step further, and hold that the owner of land may not place upon it dangerous machinery, which is alluring to children, without securing it, so as to protect them against injury while tampering with it. To this class belong what have become commonly known in legal parlance as “the turn-table cases,” such as Evansich v. Railway Company, in this, court (57 Texas, 123), and Railway Company v. Stout, in the Supreme Court of the United States (17 Wall., 657). This line of decision has not-been uniformly followed, and has met with much adverse criticism, and it seems to us, that with respect to the care which the owner of the land is required to exercise, in order to secure from injury children who may trespass upon it, they go to the limit of the law.

They proceed upon the ground that turn-tables are attractive to children. In both of the cases cited stress was laid upon this fact, and also-upon the fact that the use of the turn-tables by children was known to the. servants of the defendants. The ruling in these cases must be justified, We think, upon one of two grounds; either that the turn-tables possess such' peculiar attractiveness as playthings for children that to leave them exposed should be deemed equivalent to an invitation to use them, or that,, when unsecured, they are so obviously dangerous to children that,-when it is discovered that they are using them, it is negligence on the part of the owner not to take some steps to guard them against the danger.

But when it is said.that'it is enough that the object or place is attractive or alluring to children, and when it is said, as has been intimated,, that the fact that they resort to a particular locality is evidence of its. attractiveness, the question suggests itself, what object or place is not attractive to very young persons who are left free to pursue their innate propensity to wander in quest of amusement? What objeot at all unusual is exempt from infantile curiosity? What place, conveniently accessible for their congregation, is free from the restless feet of adventurous truants? Here the language of an eminent judge in disposing of a similar case is appropriate: “There are streams and pools of water where children may be drowned; there are inequalities of surface where *71 they may be injured.

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32 L.R.A. 825, 36 S.W. 430, 90 Tex. 65, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-kansas-texas-railway-co-v-edwards-tex-1896.