St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. of Texas v. Hudson

17 S.W.2d 793
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1929
DocketNo. 1261—5291
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 17 S.W.2d 793 (St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. of Texas v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. of Texas v. Hudson, 17 S.W.2d 793 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

CRITZ, J.

This suit was filed in the district court of Smith county, Tex., by W. H. Hudson and his wife, Rosa Hudson, defendants in error, who will, for convenience, be herein designated plaintiffs, against St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas, plaintiff in error, who will, for convenience, be designated defendant, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiffs in virtue of their son, Clayton Hudson, having been shot and killed by one L. W. Pearce, a Texas ranger. The grounds upon which plaintiffs seek recovery are:

(a) That Pearce, at the time he killed Clayton Hudson, was in the employ of defendant; that such killing was wrongful; and that at the time Pearce was acting within the scope of his employment by defendant.
(b) That Pearce was a person unfit for the service that he was employed by defendant to perform; that defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could and should have known, that Pearce was an unfit person to perform such service; and that defendant was guilty of negligence in permitting said Pearce to remain in its service. In this connection it was alleged by plaintiffs that Pearce and other rangers were employed by defendant to protect its property and to prevent strikers from stationing and maintaining “pickets” around and near its shops, etc., and from interfering with its employees, and from dissuading persons from working for defendant. It is also alleged by the plaintiffs that Clayton Hudson was stationed in a public street in the city of Tyler, and acting within his rights as a “picket” at the time he was killed; ' that in killing the said Clayton [794]*794Hudson, Pearce acted wrongfully and negligently within the actual and apparent scope of his employment by defendant; and that Clayton Hudson’s death was the direct and proximate result of the negligence of defendant and wrongful acts of Pearce.

The plaintiffs then specifically and particularly pleaded the unfitness of Pearce, and his had character and reputation, and defendant’s knowledge thereof, in the following language:

“The said L. W. Pearce was, at the time of said killing, and had been for a long time prior thereto, a violent, dangerous, overbearing and brutal man who regarded lightly the taking of human life, and was likely at any time to. shoot and kill or otherwise seriously injure the deceased or some other of said strikers unlawfully and wholly without justification, by reason of which disposition and characteristic he was wholly unsuited and unfit for the service in which he was employed by the defendant Company, as aforesaid, and wholly unfit for the said service in which the defendant caused and permitted him to be employed at and about its premises. Besides all this, the general reputation of the said L. W. Pearce, as being a violent, brutal and dangerous man, was and long had been exceedingly bad, at the time of said killing, throughout the' City of Tyler and in the portion thereof where the defendant Company’s said shopgrounds were located and its officers and agents operated as such, all of which qualities, characteristics, unfitness and general reputation of said L. W. Pearce the defendant company, its officers and agents well knew, and would have known by exercising ordinary care, at the time of and long before said killing, in ample time before it occurred to have avoided the killing of deceased by discharging said Pearce from the defendant Company’s service and causing him to be discharged from the said employment in which he was engaged, which the defendant Company and its agents could and would have done by exercising ordinary or reasonable care before the time of said killing, but the defendant Company, its officers and agents negligently employed the said L. W. Pearce in the defendant’s said service, and negligently caused and permitted him to be retained in said employment, and negligently caused and permitted him to be employed in said service, and negligently caused and permitted him to be stationed with a loaded gun upon and in the vicinity of the defendant’s said shopgrounds at the time when and place where the said strikers were lawfully maintaining tjieir pickets, including the deceased, during the said strike, and where the said Peáree as such armed guard was likely at any time to encounter the deceased or other picket of the strikers, and was likely at any ■time to wrongfully, unlawfully and negligently kill or seriously injure any of them, including the deceased, all of which the defendant, its officers and agents well knew, and would have known by exercising ordinary care, at the time of and long before said killing, in ample time to avoid or prevent the same by discharging said Pearce or causing him to be discharged from said service before the killing, which, the defendant, its officers and agents could and would have done by exercising ordinary care, which in all of said circumstances it was their duty to do. A direct and proximate cause of Eugene O. Hudson’s death was the aforesaid unlawful, wrongful and negligent act of said L. W. Pearce, in the defendant Company’s said service, in shooting the deceased as already stated. A direct and proximate cause of decedent’s death was the negligence of the defendant Company in employing said Pearce and in causing or permitting him to be stationed upon or near its said premises, as an armed guard, when he was a violent and dangerous •man, wholly unfit for said service, and when his general reputation was that of a violent and dangerous man, and when the defendant, its officers and agents well knew his said qualities and his said general reputation, and would have known the same by exercising ordinary care, at the time of and before said killing.”

The defendant answered by general demurrer, and specially excepted to that part of the petition setting up the bad character of Pearce a.nd defendant’s alleged knowledge thereof, etc.

The defendant further pleaded:

“(a) that at the time of the .killing Pearce was a duly appointed and acting ranger in the service of the State of Texas, and that he, with a number of other rangers had been ordered by the governor of Texas to guard appellant’s shop grounds to prevent certain of its former employees, including decedent, who were then out on a strike, from invading or trespassing upon appellant’s said property, and from injuring and interfering with its employees; that the said rangers, including Pearce, were under the command and subject alone to the orders of H. P. Brady, a Texas Ranger, who was then acting as a captain of the force of rangers that had been stationed in appellant’s shop grounds for the purpose of preventing the strikers from doing the things above set out; that appellant had no authority to control, or direct Pearce in the discharge of his duties as a ranger, and never at any time, ordered, directed or commanded him to prevent deceased and the other strikers from picketing its shop grounds, or interfering with them in any way; that Pearce was not acting as a servant, employee, or agent of the defendant, but was acting as a ranger in virtue of his appointment and qualification as such, and appellant was in no way responsible for him having shot and killed the son of appellees; [795]

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W.2d 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-ry-co-of-texas-v-hudson-texcommnapp-1929.