Phillips v. Crow

199 S.W. 851, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1917
DocketNo. 1270.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 851 (Phillips v. Crow) 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
Phillips v. Crow, 199 S.W. 851, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1142 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BOYCE, J.

The appellee, Crow, sued appellants, Phillips and Irby, for conversion of 29 head of stock cattle, an'd in the alternative for possession of said cattle and damages on accqunt of their wrongful taking arid detention by defendants. The defendant Irby denied that he had taken possession of said cattle with any intention of converting them, but alleged that such possession was taken for the purpose of preventing their trespassing on his premises and destroying his crops. He pleaded that plaintiff’s field adjoined this defendant’s, and that the defendant had between them a fence sufficient to protect the inclosure from entry of cattle of the usual and ordinary disposition; that plaintiff’s said cattle were of a breachy, fence-breaking nature, and that plaintiff, knowing such fact permitted them to range on his own field, knowing that they would break through the fence and destroy defendant’s crop; that said cattle did break through said fence and damaged defendant’s crop, and said defendant Irby, by a counterclaim, sought to recover damages for the value of his crop so destroyed. The defendant Phillips’ connection with the case grew out of the alleged fact that he assisted the defendant Irby in taking possession of and holding said cattle, but, as none of the assignments relate specifically to his liability, independent of the rights of the said Irby, it is not necessary to further state the pleading or evidence in relation to the issues presented as to said defendant. The plaintiff, by a supplemental petition, alleged that the 'defendant Irby was guilty of contributory negligence in that he failed to erect and maintain a fence around his field sufficient to keep out cattle of ordinary disposition.

The evidence was sufficient to require a submission to the jury of the issues as to the breachy nature of plaintiff’s cattle, his knowledge thereof, and the sufficiency pf the defendant Irby’s fence to turn cattle of .ordinary disposition. In the charge to the jury the court gave the ordinary definition of negligence, contributory negligence, and proximate cause, and submitted special issues, one of which required a finding as to whether the plaintiff, Qrow, was guilty of negligence in putting his cattle in his field adjoining that of the defendant Irby, which issue was answered in the affirmative, but the jury answered another issue to the effect that such negligence was not the proximate cause of the entry of the cattle into defendant Irby’s field. The second issue submitted was as follows:

“(2) Was defendant’s west fence such a fence as was reasonably sufficient to exclude from his field cattle of ordinary disposition as to breaking fence and which were not of a vicious or fence-breaking nature?” To which the jury answered: “We do not agree.”

The séventh issue submitted was as follows:

“(7) Was defendant Joe Irby guilty of contributory negligence as same has been defined, in either failing to erect and maintain a sufficient fence along the west line of his field, if he did, or in permitting said fence to become dilapidated and the wire slack, if he did, or in the matter of setting said fence with small posts at the distance they were apart, if he did, or in the matter of not building said fence of sufficient height to turn cattle of-’ordinary disposition, if he did?” To which the jury answered: “Yes.”

The eighth issue was as follows:

“If you answer ‘Yes’ to the last question, then say whether or not such contributory negligence, if such there was on the part of the said defendant, contributed to or caused said cattle to breach said fence as a proximate result thereof?” To which the jury answered: “Yes.”

The jury also found that plaintiff was damaged $144 on account of loss of milk from cows held by defendants, and made partial findings as to the value of the defendant Irby’s crop destroyed by said cattle. Upon this verdict the court entered judgment for the plaintiff for the recovery of said cattle and the sum of $44 damages, and that the defendant Irby take nothing by his cross-action against the plaintiff.

[1] Appellant insists that no judgment could be entered on the verdict of the jury because of its failure to agree on an answer to the second issue above quoted, which presented a material issue as to appellant Irby’s right to recover on his counterclaim, while appellee contends that the answer of the jury to the seventh and eighth issues virtually disposes of this issue against appellant, so that an answer to the second issue becomes immaterial. We take it that the jury, in answering that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence in putting his cattle in the field adjoining defendant Irby’s, probably found that said cattle were known to the plaintiff to be breachy. There is no contention that appellant Irby’s fence was a statutory lawful *852 fence, but tbe evidence, as we have said, is sufficient to warrant the submission of the seconS issue to the jury. The law as to appellant Irby’s rights under such' circum-' stances is well settled by decisions of the Supreme Court in the case of Clarendon Land & Investment Co. v. McClelland, 86 Tex. 179, 23 S. W. 576, 1100, 22 L. R. A. 105, and Id., 89 Tex. 483, 34 S. W. 98, 35 S. W. 474, 31 L. R. A. 669, 59 Am. St. Rep. 70, and is thus stated by Judge Brown in the report of the decision in 89 Tex. 483, 34 S. W. p. 99, 31 L. R. A. 669, 59 Am. St. Rep. 70:

“(1) That the common-law rule, which required every man to restrain his cattle either by tethering or by inclosure, is not in for.ce in this state, and that every owner of land in this state who desires to exclude therefrom cattle running at large, or in an adjoining pasture, situated as these pastures were, must throw around his own land an inclosure sufficient to exclude all animals, of the class intended to be excluded, of ordinary disposition as to breaking fences or in-elosures. (2) It is the right of every owner of domestic animals which are not known to him to be vicious, mischievous, or diseased to allow them to run at large, or to occupy his own inclosed lands when adjoining those of. another. (3) If the owners of land have around it a fence sufficient to turn cattle of all sizes and kinds, of ordinary disposition as to breaking fences, and the inclosure is entered by cattle which are known to the owners to be vicious, in the sense that they have the habit of breaking into inclosures when the same class of cattle would not ordinarily do so, the owner of such cattle would be liable for such damages thereby occasioned as would ordinarily result from such trespass.”

[2] It will be noted, that in this statement of the law no mention is made of negligence. However, a reading of the reports of the case disclose that the act of the owner of breachy cattle known to him to be so in allowing them to run at large, as also the failure of the owner of land to surround it with a fence sufficient to exclude the class of stock of the ordinary disposition which it is desired to exclude, is characterized as negligence. The application of the term may not be strictly proper, for those decisions and a consideration of the principles upon which the conclusion announced is reached show that the question of negligence does not become one

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 851, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-crow-texapp-1917.