St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Griffith

35 S.W. 741, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 631, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 249
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 29, 1896
DocketNo. 1382.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 741 (St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Griffith) 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
St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Griffith, 35 S.W. 741, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 631, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 249 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit for the recovery of damages, instituted by Annie Griffith against the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas, based upon an indecent assault committed upon her by appellant’s night agent at its depot in Greenville. The petition shows the plaintiff to be a married woman, and that her husband had permanently abandoned her, leaving her without means of support. Appellant pleaded, (1) in abatement, that appellee was a married woman and not entitled to sue alone; (2) general and special demurrers; (3) general denial; (4) special pleas of coverture; that appellee was not a passenger nor entitled to protection as such at the time of the alleged injury; that the acts and injuries complained of constituted a wanton and personal tort by the employe, committed without the scope of his duty and not in course of his employment, and were never ratified, but expressly repudiated by appellant. Appellant also plead the statute of limitation.

On trial before the court, without a jury, the court overruled the plea in abatement and demurrers, and rendered judgment on the merits for appellee for $2500; and from this judgment the railway company has appealed.

The trial judge filed conclusions of fact and law. Upon the issue as to plaintiff’s right to sue, he found these facts:

“1. I find as a matter of fact that the plaintiff, Annie Griffith, at the date of the alleged injury complained of in her petition, and at the time this suit was instituted, was a married woman, but that before the date of such injury, some ten or twelve months, her husband had abandoned her as his wife, and that at said time she was living separate and apart from him, and at the time this suit was instituted she did not know where her husband’s residence was.”

Upon the plea in abatement the evidence shows that Annie Griffith is a married woman, that she was married to James A. Griffith in 1888, sHe being then fifteen or sixteen years old, and he twenty years old; that after the marriage they lived together one year at the house of -plaintiff’s father; that they then moved to Commerce, where they lived some time, and afterward went to Ardmore, Indian Territory, where they lived in a small house built and owned by Jas. A. Griffith; that they sold said house and moved back to his father’s; that from there they moved into a rented house, at Norman, Indian Territory, where they were living in July, 1892; that about July 1, 1892, plaintiff, with her husband’s consent, went to Ardmore to visit her parents; that a short time afterward said Jas. A. Griffith went to Ardmore and visited her a week or two, but did not live with her there as his wife; that he went from there to Fort Worth, Texas, to look for a house,v and was gone some two months, during which time they corresponded with each *633 •other; that he did not get a home, hut came back to Ardmore and stayed a day or two; that he then asked plaintiff to return with him to Texas, and she said she would go with him anywhere except to live with his parents, which she was unwilling to do because they had mistreated her; that he left, saying that he would get a home near Sherman, Texas, and send for her; that she packed up her things and kept them packed, und went to the postoffice twice a day for a month, but got no letter from him, and he did not come back and never contributed a cent more to her support thereafter; that she then supposed he had then left her for good, and about ten or twelve months thereafter she went to Mt. Vernon to make her home with her married sister living near there. It was on this trip the injury complained of occurred, at Greenville. After leaving Greenville for Mt. Vernon she accidentally met her husband on the train and rode with him about six miles; that she then told him she would live with him anywhere under the sun except at his parents’ house. He did not say where he lived or what he would do; she told him that she had had trouble at Greenville, but he did not ask her anything about it and she did not tell him what occurred. He gave her no money, but gave the baby a dime, and ten cents’ worth of candy. He got off the train at a small station, and she went on to Mt. Vernon, ■and brought this suit by the advice of her brother-in-law. That at the time Jas. A. Griffith parted with plaintiff at Ardmore the last time, in the fall of 1892, he promised to write to her, but did not at that time intend to do so, but intended to permanently abandon her, never intending to live with her again, and never after that time contributed attiring to plaintiff’s support, and never intended to; that at the time plaintiff met Jas. A. Griffith at Commerce, she asked him where he lived and he refused to tell; and when she told him that she had had trouble at Greenville, he did not ask her anything, made no reply, and acted so indifferently that plaintiff did not tell him what the trouble ■was.

The evidence clearly showed a permanent abandonment of the wife by the husband, without fault on her part, and she was left without any means of support whatever.

Upon the merits of the case these facts were found by 'the court:

“2. I find that on or about June 27, 1893, the plaintiff left Ardmore, Indian Territory, where her parents then resided, to go to Mt. Vernon, Franklin County, Texas, for the purpose of living with one of her married sisters, who then lived in said Franklin County, and that at Gaines-ville, Cook County, Texas, she bought and paid for a through coupon ticket, via Sherman and Bells, via the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway, to Mt. Vernon, Franklin County, Texas. That said ticket was valid, and was thereafter duly honored and accepted by the defendant, and plaintiff was transported from said Gainesville to said Mt. Vernon by the defendant on said ticket, as a passenger on one of its passenger trains. That the plaintiff, on said June 27th, arrived at Greenville, on the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway, under her contract as a passen *634 ger on said ticket, and attached to said ticket was a transfer ticket, or coupon, which the plaintiff had purchased and paid for at ■ Gainesville, from the Missouri, Kansas and Texas depot to the depot of the defendant; that said depots were about one mile apart; that as soon as plaintiff reached Greenville, the conductor of the train of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway, on which plaintiff was a passenger, showed her the transfer line or bus that her ticket called for, on which she was to be transferred from the Missouri, Kansas and Texas depot to the defendant’s depot. That the manager of said transfer line accepted her as a passenger, and she gave him her said transfer ticket, and he accepted it, and promised to carry plaintiff to a hotel to wait until defendant’s next regular passenger train left Greenville for Mt. Vernon, it being then about 2 o’clock p. m., and the time for defendant’s first passenger train thereafter to leave Greenville for Mt. Vernon being 12 o’clock that night. That the manager of said transfer line did not carry plaintiff to a hotel, but did carry her direct to the depot of the defendant, and delivered her to the defendant at its depot in Greenville.

“That plaintiff-had no money, and with her was her babe, which was about one year old, and she was a stranger and did not know the distance nor the location of the hotels and boarding houses at Greenville from the defendant’s depot.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 741, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 631, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-railway-co-v-griffith-texapp-1896.