Sawyer v. Dulany

30 Tex. 479
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 Tex. 479 (Sawyer v. Dulany) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. Dulany, 30 Tex. 479 (Tex. 1867).

Opinion

Morrill, C. J.

This suit was brought by Dulany and wife v. Sawyer et al., proprietors of a stage coach. The record discloses that the plaintiffs below were passengers in a stage coach owned-by defendants, and traveling from Havasota to Waco, with fifteen other passengers,- seventeen in all; that plaintiff had prepaid his passage money, and during the journey the stage was upset, whereby the wife of Dulany was so severely injured that she was unable to proceed further on the journey, was taken to the nearest house, where she remained under the care of a physician for six days, when she was delivered of two children of premature [484]*484birth, who survived about two hours. At the time of the trial in the district court, which was six years after the accident, Mrs. Dulany walked like she was stiff in her hips; that the driver of the coach, at the time of the accident, was greatly intoxicated, and had been more or less so for some time; that the passengers, at the different stage stands, expressed their anxiety to have the driver replaced by a sober man, but the agents replied that no other could be furnished; that the cause of the coach upsetting was by being driven upon a stump from four to six inches high in descending a hill very rapidly, and that the same could have been easily avoided.

The judge charged the jury—

1. That if they find from the evidence that the defendants were the owners of the stage coach engaged in carrying passengers, they are liable in this action for compensatory damages for the injuries shown- by the testimony to have been sustained by the plaintiff, if the evidence shows the least negligence, want of skill or caution, or any carelessness on the part of the driver of said coach in which plaintiffs were passengers.

2. That defendants are not responsible, in vindictive or exemplary damages, for the acts of their driver or agent; but if said defendants were guilty of gross negligence, the jury may take into consideration the general character of the driver for care and skill, his condition at the time of the accident, and at any previous time while in the employ of defendants, and determine whether the defendants were guilty of gross negligence in the fact of their having him in their employ.

3. That if the jury believe from the evidence that the injuries complained of were occasioned solely by the want of skill or caution of the driver, they will give the plaintiffs compensatory damages; if they believe said injuries, or any part, were caused by the want of proper care and prudence on the part of plaintiffs, they will not award any [485]*485compensation for such injuries; if the jury believe from the evidence that any part of the injuries resulted from the want of proper care and prudence of both plaintiffs and driver, they will not award damages for such injuries.

The first error assigned is, that the court erred in admitting the receipt for the stage fare. The bill of exceptions taken shows that during the trial the plaintiffs offered to read a receipt for the stage fare of defendants by their agent, which was objected to, unless the execution of said receipt was proven.

As this assigned error of the district judge was the principal one relied on for reversal, we have particularly examined the same. The statute (Paschal’s Dig., Art. 1443) provides, that “when any petition, answer, or other pleading shall be founded in whole or in part on any instrument or note- in writing charged to have been executed by the other party or by his authority, and not alleged therein to be lost or destroyed, such instrument or note in writing shall .be received as evidence without the necessity of proving its execution, unless the party by whom or by whose authority such instrument or note in writing is charged to have been executed shall file his affidavit in writing denying the execution thereof.” The petition recited that the plaintiffs had paid $42 as their stage fare, and described, in Imc verba, the receipt for the same signed for the defendants by their agent.

There can be no doubt that the legislature intended that the signatureLof any party to an instrument should by the profert of the same be regarded as proved, and thus doing away with the necessity of calling witnesses to prove it ; and in order that the act should not be the cause of injustice to the party against whom it was designed to be used, the same was required to be set forth in the petition, answer, or other pleading. The statute does not designate one particular class of instruments, such as bills of exchange or promissory notes; but inasmuch as the same reason [486]*486existed for admitting one instrument or note in writing without proof of its execution as another, therefore it provided, in as broad and comprehensive a manner as possible, for “ any instrument or note in writing,” and still further, not only those that purported to be actually executed by the party, but “by his authority.” Still farther, inasmuch as the policy of the law requires that there should be as little strife as possible, and that all matters in dispute between parties should be adjudicated as far as practicable in a single action, it was contemplated by the legislature and provided in the statute that said instruments might be used, whether they formed the whole or part of the complaint or defense. It is difficult to conceive how a statute could be worded so as to be more extensive in significa^ tion than this.

The same policy of dispensing with testimony to prove the execution of instruments is shown by article S716 of Paschal’s Digest, which authorizes deeds and similar instruments, which have been or may be recorded, to be used, by filing the same with the records of the suit, and giving the opposite party three days’ notice of the same. We therefore believe that the legislature intended by the act to declare, that “any and.every instrument or note in writing,” in cases properly pleaded, whether the same was the whole or any part of the testimony, and for either plaintiff or defendant, could be used, provided it was signed, or purported to be signed, by the opposite party or his agent, without proving the signature, unless" non est factum be pleaded by the party charged.

The appellant insists that this action is for a tort, a suit for unliquidated damages, and that the receipt for the payment of the passage money could have no other effect than to prove the passage money was paid, and that this action is not founded in whole or in part on the same. The receipt was as follows:

[487]*487“Received of E. Dulany $42, his stage fare for three seats from Eavasota to Waco.
“Houston, February 24, 1860. Sawyer & Co.
per W. B. Bates.”

This receipt is a memorandum of a contract executed by Dulany and executory by Sawyer & Co.

The legal purport of this contract is, that said Sawyer & Co., for and in consideration of the sum of $42, paid by Dulany, agreed to convey three passengers, by stage coach, from Eavasoto to Waco, said passengers to be furnished by said Dulany; and they further promised, to “provide careful drivers, of reasonable skill and good habits, for the journey, and “not to overload the coach either with passengers or with luggage, and to take care that the weight is suitably adjusted, so that the coach should not be top-heavy and made liable to overset.” (Story on Bail., §§ 593, 594.)

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Bluebook (online)
30 Tex. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-dulany-tex-1867.