Proctor v. San Antonio Street Railway Co.

62 S.W. 938, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 148, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 62 S.W. 938 (Proctor v. San Antonio Street Railway Co.) 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
Proctor v. San Antonio Street Railway Co., 62 S.W. 938, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 148, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 58 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

ON MOTION TO DISMISS.

ELY, Associate Justice.

Plaintiffs in error sued the San Antonio Street Eailway Company for damages, and judgment going against them, sued out this writ of error to this court. It was alleged in the application “that since the rendition of judgment in said cause the charter of the San Antonio Street Eailway Company was canceled by decree of court, and the San Antonio Traction Company has become and is its successor in all things, and has acquired its property and rights and assumed the payment of all its debts, obligations and liabilities,” and citation was asked against both companies.

The San Antonio Traction Company moves to dismiss the writ of error, because the San Antonio Street Railway Company, being defunct before the writ was perfected, could not have been a party to the proceeding in connection with the oath as to inability to give a writ of error bond; and because the San Antonio Traction Company was not a party to the suit in the lower court, and consequently was not a party to the proceeding by which the writ of error was prosecuted, in showing that they were unable to give a bond or pay costs.

We are of the opinion that the allegation herein copied from the application for the writ of error was sufficient to make the San Antonio Traction Company a party in this court. Stephenson v. Railway, 42 Texas, 152.

The decision cited has never been criticised or challenged, but has been cited with approval in a number of cases. Railway v. Murphy, 46 Texas, 356; Indianola v. Railway, 56 Texas, 594; Railway v. Fryer, 56 Texas, 617; Acres v. Moyne, 59 Texas, 623.

In the Stephenson case the suit was filed and prosecuted in the. trial •court against the Southern Pacific Railway Company, - and the Texas & Pacific Railway Company was made the party defendant to the writ ■of error on an allegation that the first named company had been absorbed by the latter, which had its franchise, and was a privy in inter *150 est to the matters involved in the suit. The court referred to statutes permitting the consolidation of the two roads, and it was held that the presumption would prevail that the entire existence of the Southern Pacific Company was merged in the Texas Pacific Company, and it devolved upon the latter to show in connection with its motion to dismiss that it was not responsible for the debts of the other company. “But,” says the court, “no effort to rebut this presumption has been made, either by showing the terms of consolidation agreed to by said companies, or proof of the continued separate corporate existence of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company subsequent to said consolidation. Prom these premises, we think it clearly follows that the defendant in error is not, as is insisted, a stranger to the record, but is in fact the party in whose favor the judgment stands, and against whom alone the writ of error can be prosecuted.”

The allegations in the application for writ of error in this case show that the San Antonio Street Railway Company, since the judgment was rendered against it, has become defunct by decree of court, and that the San Antonio Traction Company is its successor and has acquired its property and rights and assumed the payment of all its debts, obligations, and liabilities. The San Antonio Traction Company does not deny any of these allegations, and produces nothing to show that they are not true. Being taken, therefore, as true, the San Antonio Tractian Company is in fact the party in whose favor the judgment stands and is a proper party to this writ.

The statute (article 1401, Revised Statutes) does not require notice of the filing of an affidavit made in lieu of an appeal or a writ of error bond. Stewart v. Heidenheimer, 55 Texas, 644; Graves v. Horn, 89 Texas, 77.

The motion is overruled.

Overruled.

ON THE MERITS.

This suit was instituted by J. M. Proctor, S. A. Proctor, and Eva Proctor, joined pro forma by her husband, J. P. McIntyre, to recover of defendant in error damages in the sum of $10,000, on account of the death of J. G. Proctor, the father of the two Proctors and Mrs. McIntyre. The trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendant in error.

The uncontroverted facts show that J. M. Proctor and J. P. McIntyre had a contract with defendant in error, hereinafter styled defendant, to remove a large pile of cinders from the yard of defendant at its Tenth street power house in San Antonio. The yard was between the carshed and the power house, and was about 100 feet long. Cinders were scattered nearly all over the yard, the average height being about six feet. The cinders were probably seven feet high where the man was killed, and *151 there was a trolley wire directly over that pile. On August 11, 1897,, deceased came from the home of plaintiffs to bring dinner to his soil and McIntyre, and took up a hoe with an iron handle to dig down the-cinders, which, being hot, had been saturated with water, and about tlm second blow caught the hoe on the trolley wire, and received an electric-shock which almost instantly killed him. Deceased when he received, the current of electricity was standing near, if not on, the rails of the street car track. Deceased was 57 years old, and was being supported by his children, the plaintiffs, they giving him his food and clothing for what services he rendered. He contributed nothing whatever to them. McIntyre swore: “We were all living together at the time of the accident, and he did what he could towards helping us make a living. * * * The pay that we had given him and that he had earned was his victuals and clothes. * * * jf p pa(p noticed his using that hoe sooner, I would have stopped him from that, because we did not permit him to do any work, and he just come down over there to bring our dinner to us, and he raked the cinders down.” J. M. Proctor swore: “My father lived with me all these years and I supported him. I gave him his victuals and clothes and whatever he needed, and he lived with me and my family.” There was some testimony by these witnesses as to the services of deceased being worth four or five hundred dollars, but it was so utterly inconsistent with their other testimony as to amount to nothing, and it was plain and uncontradicted that deceased gave them nothing, and if he had lived there was no probability shown that he would have contributed to their support, but would have been a charge to them. The evidence established the contributory negligence of deceased. „

The grounds- of negligence alleged were, that defendant did not warn deceased or plaintiffs of the dangerous nature of the wire, and that the wire was not insulated as required by the ordinances of the city of San Antonio. Deceased was not a servant of defendant, and it was not shown even that it had any knowledge of deceased being upon its premises. The relation of master and servant did not exist between deceased and defendant, and no duty of warning deceased of the danger reseed upon defendant. Plaintiffs were independent contractors, and deceased was their servant, and if anyone owed it to deceased to give warning of the danger of standing on steel or a wet surface and with wet hands grasping an iron hoe and touching a charged trolley wire, it devolved on plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W. 938, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 148, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-san-antonio-street-railway-co-texapp-1901.