Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Smith

68 S.W. 543, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 565, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 68 S.W. 543 (Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Smith) 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
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v. Smith, 68 S.W. 543, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 565, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 189 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BOOKHOTJT, Associate Justice.

This is a suit by J. E. Smith against appellant for damages for injuries alleges to have been received by him on the 13th day of January, 1892, while in the employ of appellant. The injuries were alleged to be permanent. The appellee also alleged in his petition that shortly after the injuries he instituted a suit against appellant, and thereafter, its agents, with the fraudulent intent of securing a dismissal of said suit and a release of his claim for damages, proposed to him that it would give him $300 and would thereafter ■employ appellee for life in its service, whenever he would apply for such employment, and would pay him for his services during his lifetime not less than $60 per month, and that on the faith of these promises he ■accepted the $300 from appellant and executed a release; that these promises were fraudulently made with no intent of being performed. That thereafter he went to work for appellant and worked for about two years and then laid off for some six or seven months with the consent of appellant, and thereafter, on the 23d day of April, 1897, resumed his employment with appellant and worked for two days, after which time he was informed by the defendant company that it could not use him any more; that he continued to apply for work expecting and be *566 lieving that appellant would comply with its contract, and that he made repeated and sundry efforts to carry out his part of it; that appellant did not give him employment, and that about the 1st of March, 1900, appellant informed, him that it could not and wopld not use him any more, and would not employ him further, since which time it has refused and failed to give him. employment.. That appellee in his petition tendered the $300 paid him into court, but did not in fact tender any money. The petition alleged his age and life expectancy, and claimed damages in the sum of $20,000. The petition was filed on September 10, 1900.

The appellant answered by general denial and also pleaded, in bar of appellee’s recovery, releases dated December 5, 1892, and December 23, 1892, wherein and whereby appellee released appellant from all damages by reason of the injuries aforesaid, and further pleaded the statute of limitations of two years and of four years in bar of plaintiff’s suit; and further, that the injuries resulted from and were due to risks assumed by him on entering the employment of appellant, and further pleaded contributory negligence.

The appellee, by supplemental petition, pleaded under oath that the releases issued were not binding because the same were procured by fraud of the defendant, and that it represented to him that if he would sign such releases that the company would give him employment as alleged'in his petition, and the said promises were not made on the part of appellant in good faith, but were made with the intention of securing appellee’s signature to said release by fraud; that the chief inducement to sign the same was the false and fraudulent promises on the part of appellant to give him employment, which promises and consideration failed, and he tenders again in his supplemental petition the $300 alleged to have been paid him.

Appellee further pleaded that the pleas of limitations interposed by appellant were not available to it, because, as alleged in the petition, the appellant pretended that it would comply with the agreement and give him employment, and falsely and fraudulently represented that it would do so, and deceived plaintiff into the belief that it would comply with said agreement until a short time ago, to wit, until less than a year before the filing of this suit.

■ The case proceeded to trial and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff on March 23, 1901, in the sum of $4000 and costs. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, it excepted, and has duly perfected an appeal.

Opinion.—1. The fifth assignment of error complains of the eleventh paragraph of the charge of the court submitting the question of limitations. This charge tells the jury that plaintiff’s cause of action is barred unless they have found that the release was obtained by fraudulent representations, and that the defendant company, by its fraudulent conduct, led plaintiff to believe that it would carry out said contract with *567 plaintiff and give him a lifetime employment, and that plaintiff believed- and acted thereon, and that he did not discover, and could not, by the exercise.of ordinary diligence, have discovered the fraudulent purpose of defendant within a period of not more than two years before the bringing of suit. The facts upon which this charge is based are: Appellee, who was a conductor on one of appellant’s freight trains running between Dallas and Denison, was injured near Garza, a station on appellant’s road, in attempting to make a coupling of its cars on the night of January 13, 1892. He instituted suit in the District Court of Gray-son County to recover damages for said injuries. After he had filed suit, J. W. Maxwell, appellant’s superintendent, sent for him and they had a conversation about the matter. Maxwell said to him that he had been working for the road a long time and that he ought not to have brought the suit; that the railway company would treat him right; that he replied to Mr. Maxwell that he would not have brought the suit if he had thought he would have been treated right; that Mr. Maxwell said to him, “You draw this suit and we will take care of you for life.” Smith testified: “I spoke about something to fix up that right, and he said, ‘We will give you a job for life at not less than $60 per month, and you can build up in the line of office work just the same as you have in the transportation department, and could probably be made operator or agent.’ That he didn’t ask Mr. Maxwell at that time whether he would pay him anything or not. That Maxwell said that I might go ahead with this law suit and get all the way from one. to six thousand dollars, and wanted to know if I wouldn’t rather have a job as long as I lived where something comes in every month. I thought about it and told him yes; for him to fix up the thing and I would go to work; that I wanted to live in Waco, I had about $3500 saved up and I put that into a home, figuring on a job as long as I lived. I signed a release. They sent the paper down there to this agent, Bower, that I was working for, I signed that paper and never read it; I never looked at it; I never thought about them treating me wrong; thought that I would be treated right. When I accepted this position I relied on the proposition he made me; that was in the main this, that he, Bower, said something about I’ll allow you three months’ time, which is $300, and that was the draft they sent me; they afterwards sent me a draft or something of the kind for $300. After settlement they gave me a job at $60 per month. I worked there two years. I was overworked; I told the agent I would have to lay off and rest. When I went, back to work he said, ‘You have no job.’ I went to him twenty-five times after that, I guess, and bothered after him and tried to get my place back, and finally he put me to work.” These statements were made on direct examination. On cross-examination he said that when he got the $300 Mr. Standifer came to Waco and he gave him what he promised to, $100.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 543, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 565, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-kansas-texas-railway-co-v-smith-texapp-1902.