Northern Texas Traction Co. v. Danforth

116 S.W. 147, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 419, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 634
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 147 (Northern Texas Traction Co. v. Danforth) 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
Northern Texas Traction Co. v. Danforth, 116 S.W. 147, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 419, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 634 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

RAINEY, Chief Justice.

E. A. Danforth, appellee, instituted this suit in the District Court of Dallas County to recover of appellant damages for personal injuries to his wife sustained by her while attempting to alight from one of appellant’s cars in the city of Ft. Worth. Appellant answered by general exception, general denial and plea of contributory negligence. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee, and the Traction Company appeals.

The appellant duly presented to the trial court a motion to quash the jury panel as being unconstitutional, the jury having been drawn under the Act of the Thirtieth Legislature, chapter 139, page 269. The contention, in effect, is that said Act is a special law in that it provides for a certain jury system for all counties having, a city containing a population of 30,000 or more inhabitants as shown by .the United States census of the year 1900, and thereby excludes from the operation of such system all counties in the State that may hereafter have cities of increased population of 20,000, therefore said Act is in violation of section 56, article 3 of the Constitution. Said section of the Constitution provides: “The Legislature shall not, except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, pass any local or special law authorizing, . . . summoning or empaneling grand or petit juries. . . .” The question then .is, Is the said Act of the Legislature such a local or special law as is inhibited by the Constitution of this State? In the case of Clark v. Finley, 93 Texas, 171, our Supreme Court, in an opinion rendered by Mr. Gaines, Chief Justice, held the Act of the Legislature of 1897, limiting the compensation of certain officers, which was applicable to certain counties and not to other counties, was not a special law and therefore not unconstitutional. Said Act is very similar to the one here under consideration. The opinion of Judge Gaines is able and well considered on the subject of what is and what is not a special law. Since then the very question involved in this case came before the Court of Criminal Appeals in the case of Smith v. State, 54 Texas Grim. Rep., 298, and it was held, in an able opinion by Mr. Justice Brooks, that the Act of the Thirtieth Legislature (Laws 1907, chapter 139, page 269) was not a special law and therefore not unconstitutional. Mr. Justice *421 Davidson dissented from the majority of that court. But as the opinion of a majority of that court controls in criminal procedure, we are not inclined to lay down a different rule in civil cases. The solution of the question is not free from difficulty as there is a sharp conflict bptween the authorities of other jurisdictions. We therefore hold in deference to the holding in Smith v. State, supra, that the said Act is constitutional. See also dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Brooks in Brown v. State, 54 Texas Crim. Rep., 121, for collation of authorities sustaining this holding.

The pertinent allegations of plaintiff’s petition are that on the 20th day of May, 1906, about 9 o’clock a. m., plaintiff’s wife Lula C. Danforth, with her baby in arms, became a passenger on the defendant’s interurban car No. 11, at its 10th Street station in Oak Cliff, and paid her fare to the conductor of the car, to be carried to Ft. Worth, to visit her friend, Mrs. Elizabeth Derozier. When said car stopped in response to her signal at the intersection of Main and Weatherford streets in Ft. Worth for her to alight, and while she, with her seventeen-months old baby in her arms and in the exercise of greatest care and prudence to safely alight, was stepping from the rear platform to the step, from which she would alight to the street, her feet slipped from the step of the car and- threw her with great violence and force down upon the street and backward against said step. That her feet slipped from the step of the car because •of the step being worn, making the board thinner and slanting and slippery, and because of slippery mud having accumulated and being on said step. And because said step was defectively constructed, in that, it was too steep and without sufficient projection, and was all the more dangerous being thus defectively constructed and the more liable to cause a passenger to slip and fall in stepping from the platform to this worn, muddy and slippery step. That at the time plaintiff’s wife, with her baby in her arms, was leaving the car, and while she was attempting to step from its rear platform to the street, the defendant’s conductor, who knew of the condition of said step, and which was not known to plaintiff’s wife, was standing idle and unoccupied on the rear platform of the car, leaning _ against the platform rail, and said plaintiff’s wife with her infant baby in her arms, attempting to get off the car, and said_ conductor well knowing that plaintiff’s wife needed assistance and warning on account of said condition of said step of the car, yet he remained in his position aforesaid on the rear platform of the car and failed and refused to assist her to alight therefrom or even to warn her of the dangerous condition of said step, but remained idle and silent, and made no effort to assist her or to inform her of the dangerous and perilous position she would be subjected to in using said step in alighting from the car. That at the "time of said accident plaintiff’s wife was three months pregnant with child, and the serious and painful injuries she received from said fall caused her to suffer a miscarriage on May 27, 1907, one week after the accident. After the accident she was confined thereby to her bed for about three weeks, and said serious and permanent injuries and miscarriage caused her excruciating mental and physical suffering, and will continue so to do. The evidence sustains the- alie *422 gations of the petition, and plaintiff’s wife was not guilty of contributory negligence.

The appellant’s second assignment of error is: “The court erred in the following paragraph of his charge to the jury: Tt is the duty of an interurban car conductor to be prudent and skillful and cautious to see that his passengers are not injured while alighting from his ear, and in case the passenger on the car is injured while alighting by the negligence of the conductor, if any, that is, his failure to exercise the greatest degree of care as defined in the above paragraph for the safety ofa the passenger, such failure, if any, constitutes negligence on the part of the railway company. It is the duty of the railway company, by which is meant the defendant company herein, to exercise the greatest degree of care, as defined above in this charge, to select for its use cars with steps so constructed as not to. expose to danger passengers alighting therefrom, but to maintain and keep all steps in such condition while using the car.’ ” This charge is part of the fifth paragraph of the court’s charge.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 147, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 419, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-texas-traction-co-v-danforth-texapp-1909.