Receivers of International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. Armstrong

23 S.W. 236, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 146, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 382
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 1893
DocketNo. 173.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 236 (Receivers of International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. Armstrong) 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
Receivers of International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. Armstrong, 23 S.W. 236, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 146, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 382 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

Appellee was a passenger upon appellants’ freight train, by virtue of a stock shipper’s contract, wherein it was provided, that he should look after and feed and water his carload of horses en route from Taylor, Texas, to Memphis, Tennessee. While the train had stopped at Rockdale, in the night, he, in an effort to get up one of his horses that was down in the car, got upon the drawhead of the cars between the caboose and the car in front, in which his horses were confined, and when in such position the train was, without warning or signal, backed, and thereby caused his foot to become fastened between the deadwood and the drawhead of the cars and severely crushed. For the damages resulting from the injuries sustained he brings this suit, and upon trial verdict and judgment were in his favor.

The first assignment of error goes to the ruling of the court in overruling the demurrers addressed to the petition. No error was committed in this ruling, and we dismiss the question without discussion.

The fourth subdivision of the charge of the trial court instructs the jury, that “Under the contract of shipment, the plaintiff was a passenger on defendant’s freight train on the occasion in question, having the right and privilege when said train was not moving of leaving the caboose (in which it was his duty to remain while the train was in motion), to see about and attend to his said carload of horses being transported on said train. Such right and privilege, however, did not relieve plaintiff from the duty of avoiding apparent danger and the exercise of care and caution to protect himself from injury. The law requires him to exercise such care while attending to said live stock as a man of ordinary prudence would have exercised under such circumstances.’ ’

Appellants contend that it was error to give this charge, for the reasons, substantially, that the provision in the contract of shipment requiring the appellee to feed and water and to generally look after his stock was void, and could not be enforced, as the duty in such case rested upon the carrier, and that it could not shift it by a contract to that effect; and that the appellee was under no obligation or duty to look after his stock, and when he did so, he attempted the exercise of a right not or *150 dinarity given a passenger; and that the charge quoted permits him to exercise such a right, free of the risks and burdens he assumed as an employe by virtue of his conduct.

It is held, that provisions in contracts of this character, making it the duty of the shipper to feed and water and care for his stock, will not be given effect so as to relieve the carrier of its duty to the shipper as a passenger, travelling upon a drover’s pass, and will not relieve the carrier from its negligence in failing to exercise the proper degree of care in the general exercise of its duty that it as a carrier owes to stock placed in its possession for transportation. Railway v. Lockwood, 17 Wall., 357; 48 Am. Rep., 10; Railway v. Ivy, 71 Texas, 414; Railway v. Smith, 16 S. W. Rep., 803.

The primary reason why a carrier can not in this respect shift its responsibility and duty is, that it is not just and reasonable in the eye of the law to permit it by contract to relieve itself from responsibility for the negligence of itself or servants, and to permit it by contract to shift a duty and responsibility that it as a common carrier owes to the shipper and to the preservation and care of the thing confided to its custody for shipment.

But do these rules of law necessarily result in denying the privilege to the shipper to look after his stock, when so agreed to by the carrier ? • It is true, the carrier can not by contract relieve itself of this duty by placing its performance upon the shipper, nor can it by contract relieve itself of its duty to the shipper as a passenger when accompanying the shipment; but it may grant the privilege or license to the shipper to look after his stock, holding him liable for his negligence in the exercise of it. The shipper, in looking after his stock under such a grant of privilege or license from the carrier, does not lose his status as a passenger, and the duty of the carrier in the exercise of proper caution and care toward him still exists; and if the shipper, under such circumstances, exercises due care and caution, the carrier will be liable for the results of its negligence in inflicting injury upon him. But when exercising this privilege, granted by the carrier, the shipper fails in the exercise of proper care and caution, such consequences rest upon his shoulders, and the carrier is not responsible for injury received under such circumstances. The law does not deny the privilege of the shipper to look after his stock, if he so desires, under a license from the carrier, provided he does so in a prudent manner. What it does deny is the right of the carrier to contract away its duty in this respect. Granting the privilege to the shipper to look after his stock, and his doing so, is not necessarily the exercise of authority or the performance of an act that is in conflict with the duty of the carrier in that respect; doing this thing by the shipper does not relieve the carrier of its duty in the premises. If the shipper, in the exercise of that privilege, places himself in a position of peril and danger that does not *151 ordinarily exist to passengers generally in travelling upon freight trains, he assumes what extra risk may exist by reason of such acts; but performing the act that places him in such extra hazardous or dangerous position does not relieve the carrier from the exercise of proper care in ■its conduct towards him.

This reduces the questions to simply those of care, caution, and negligence, which are properly matters to be considered by the jury, and which are left to their determination by the charge quoted.

It appears that when the freight train upon which the appellee was injured arrived at Rockdale, one of the brakemen told him to “get up and look after his stock; that the train would be there some little time, and that they would wait for a train to pass,” or words to that effect. The appellee, after this statement was made, went out of the caboose for the purpose of looking after his stock, which was in the car immediately in front of the caboose, and found one of his horses down in the end of the car next to the caboose; in order to get up the horse, he stood on the drawhead between the caboose and the car, and prodded the horse with a stick or pole, and while in such position, the train, within a few minutes after it had stopped, without signal, backed, and appellee’s foot was caught and crushed between the drawhead and the dead wood of the cars.

The principal fact in the case upon which the appellee bases his right to recover, is the authority given him by the brakeman to look after his stock, claiming that such authority from the brakeman is binding upon his employers, the appellants, he being at the time one of their servants employed in operating the train. The appellee contends, that he placed himself in the position he occupied when injured—that is,

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23 S.W. 236, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 146, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/receivers-of-international-great-northern-railway-co-v-armstrong-texapp-1893.