Southern Pacific Co. v. Godfrey

107 S.W. 1135, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 616, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 504
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 107 S.W. 1135 (Southern Pacific Co. v. Godfrey) 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
Southern Pacific Co. v. Godfrey, 107 S.W. 1135, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 616, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 504 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit for damages by appellee, who alleged that he was a resident of Arizona Territory, and, while employed by appellant, as a brakeman on a freight train, that he was injured through the negligent manner in which a car was loaded with lumber, on account of which negligence the lumber slid forivard, precipitating him to the track, where his right hand was so badly crushed as to require amputation of the fingers and thumb. Appellant answered by a plea of privilege to be sued in Harris County, Texas, which plea was overruled. It then ansAvered by a plea to the jurisdiction Avhich was oA'crruled, and it then ansAvered by general and special demurrers, and set up assumed risk, contributory negligence and unaAroidable accident. A trial .by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee for $5,000.

We conclude that the facts justified the jury in finding that appellant was guilty of negligence in the manner that it loaded and secured the lumber on its car, and that its negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries inflicted on appellee.

*620 Through the first assignment the claim is made that appellant’s plea of privilege to be sued in Harris County should have been sustained. The proof that, appellant introduced to show that the Southern Pacific Company had an agent in Houston was that it had agents there representing the “Southern Pacific’s Steamship Lines,” and did not indicate that appellant had any more control over those lines than it has over the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway and the other railroads that form the Southern Pacific system through the State of Texas. The evidence conclusively established the fact that appellant had its agents in El Paso and that it has the same president and exercises the same authority over the Texas lines as over the line that runs through California, Arizona and Hew Mexico. The private arrangements that may be made as to the pro rata of profits to be given each line is a matter of no concern to the general public, but when appellant holds itself out as controlling the lines from San Francisco to Hew Orleans, when its uniformed servants run from California, across Arizona, into Texas, when the equipments carry the name of appellant, and when all the circumstances point irresistibly to the fact that the Southern Pacific Company controls the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway, persons along the line can not be deprived of the right to sue it wherever it has an agent, in spite of the fiction that the railroad of the Southern Pacific Company ends in the middle of the Rio Grande on the line between Hew Mexico and Texas. Ho stop is made there, there is no station there, the same servants with the same uniforms, the same engines, the same cars are retained, but in spite of these facts, in spite of the alluring advertisements that inform the confiding public that appellant’s lines extend from ocean to ocean, and that A. W. Cheeseman is general agent in El Paso of the “Southern Pacific Company,” and W. C. Beck its city agent, the denial is made that appellant operates any railroad in tire State of Texas. Mr. Cheeseman can not be censured when he refuses to undertake to account for the vast amount of trouble and expense the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company is incurring just to get the traffic over the three miles of road from El Paso to the middle of the Rio Grande, or to state why the company never seeks to ship passengers by railroads to California other than the Southern Pacific Company’s Railroad, but positively refuses to ship them in any other way. The facts are very similar to and equally as potent as in the case of this appellant against Craner, 101 S. W. Rep., 534, which was decided adversely to appellant, which decision met the approval of the Supreme Court. The facts establish conclusively that appellant has its agents in the city of El Paso and that the District Court of El Paso County had jurisdiction to try this cause.

Section 25 of article 1194, Revised Statutes, authorizes suits against any foreign company doing business in this State, in any county in which such company may have an agency or representative, and the facts show that appellant was not only doing business in the State, but also that it had agents in El Paso County. The case of Peterson v. Railway, 205 U. S., 364, contains gome very refined *621 distinctions and attenuated technicalities, to which it seems that the Chief Justice and one of the justices could not subscribe, and to which this court can not subscribe and by which it is not bound. In the case of Railway v. Allen, not yet published, the foregoing decision is discussed by this court, and it is held that Federal decisions are not conclusive on State courts as to jurisdiction when no Federal question is involved. We adhere to that opinion.

We must overrule the second assignment of error which assails the admission of a certain folder in evidence, which was used by appellant in its ticket offices in Arizona, Hew Mexico and California and which was issued by appellant, and which tends to show that the line of the Southern Pacific Company extends from Hew Orleans, through El Paso, to San Francisco. While advertisements frequently give a rose-tinted hue to the claims contained in them, and are too often published to deceive rather than to give truthful information, still we can see no reason why an admission made against a party’s interest therein contained, should not be permitted to confront him when a different state of facts is being contended for by him. It stands in the category of any other admission and can not be rendered incompetent evidence by the contention that it was only an advertisement to catch the credulous public. Railway v. Allen, herein cited.

The court did not err in overruling the exception which raised the question of jurisdiction on the ground that appellee was a citizen of Arizona, and appellant was a foreign corporation, and the injuries were inflicted in Arizona. The action for damages arising from personal injuries was a transitory one and could be instituted wherever the party who committed the tort could be found. Mexican Ry. v. Mitten, 13 Texas Civ. App., 653; Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. v. Keller (Texas Civ. App.), 16 S. W. Rep., 802; Missouri, K. & T. Ry. v. Godair (Texas Civ. App.), 81 S. W. Rep., 871.

The rules of pleading did not require appellee to set out in greater detail than was done the manner in which appellant was negligent in failing to fasten and secure the lumber on - the car.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W. 1135, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 616, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-co-v-godfrey-texapp-1908.