St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Hudson

282 S.W. 257, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 316
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1926
DocketNo. 3178. [fn*]
StatusPublished

This text of 282 S.W. 257 (St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Hudson) 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 Ry. Co. v. Hudson, 282 S.W. 257, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 316 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

In July, 1922, there occurred what is commonly known as the railway shopmen’s strike. The appellant owned at that time repair shops at Tyler, Tex., in which several hundred men were employed. A large number, if not all, of those employees, joined the strike and quit work. Being apprehensive of injury to its property and interference with its railway operation by the strikers or their sympathizers, appellant, through its attorneys, applied to the Governor of Texas for a troop of rangers to act as guards for protection against such violence and interference. The Governor consented to send rangers, provided the appellant would pay their salaries, giving as a reason for this condition that no appropriation for that purpose was available. About September 15, 1922, a body of approximately 30 rangers were sent to Tyler and stationed within and about appellant’s shops and yards. On or about October 7, one of those rangers, one L. W. Pearce, shot and killed Clayton Hudson, a son of appellees W. H. and Rosa Hudson. The circumstances under which the killing occurred showed that it was unprovoked and unjustifiable.

Suit was later filed by the appellees against the appellant to recover the resulting damages. It was alleged in their petition that Pearce was an employee of the appellant,' acting as a guard of its private property and in the furtherance of his employment at the time he committed the homicide. It was also alleged that Pearce was a dangerous and violent man; that the appellant *258 knew that fact, and negligently retained him in its service as a guard.

Appellant pleaded as an answer the existence of the strike; that its property and operation were menaced by threatened violence from the strikers and their sympathizers; and that, in order to protect its property, and to enable it to continue the uninterrupted operation of its road as a common carrier, it applied for and secured in a lawful manner a number of state rangers to act as guards to prevent the threatened violence. It further alleged that Pearce was one of those legally appointed rangers; that he was subject only to the orders and authority of the regularly appointed captain of the ranger force, and was in' no sense its private employee, nor was he at the time of the killing performing any service for the railway company. It also averred that the killing of Hudson by Pearce was the result of a private difference between Pearce and the deceased, wholly unconnected with any legal duty which Pearce had engaged to perform for appellant.

The court submitted to the jury the following special issues: (1) Was Pearce an employee of the defendant company on the occasion and at the time Pludson was killed? (2) Was he at that time acting within the scope of his employment? (3) Was the killing of I-Iudson by Pearce a wrongful act? (4) Was Pearce a person unfit for the service, if any, he was employed by the defendant to perform? (5) Gould the defendant or its officers, by the exercise of ordinary care, have ascertained before the killing of Hudson that Pearce was a person unfit (if he was unfit) for the service, if any, in which he was employed by the defendant company at the time of the killing? (0) Was such unfitness, if any, a proximate cause, of the death of Hudson? (7) Was the appellant, its agents, and servants guilty of negligence in permitting Pearce to be and remain in the service, if he was, at the time of the killing? (8) Was such negligence of defendant, if there was any, a proximate cause of the death of Hudson? All of those questions were answered in the affirmative. The jury, in answer to other questions, fixed the aggregate damages to the appellees at the sum of $9,500.

The main ground here urged for a reversal of the judgment is that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings of the jury in regard to Pearce’s employment and his relations to the appellant. It is insisted that the evidence conclusively showed that Peárce was a public officer, regularly appointed, was acting solely as an officer, was in no way responsible to the appellant for his conduct, and was not under its control in any of the details of the service he was performing or was engaged to perform.

As authority for the sending of rangers to guard its property and prevent interference with its commerce, counsel for appellants • refer to what is known as the “Open’ Port Law,” enacted in 1920 at a called session of the Legislature'. The penal provisions of that act appear as chapter 10 'of title 14 of the Revised Penal Code of 1925. Other provisions of the act are found in the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, appearing as articles 907 to 911, inclusive. Article 907 is as follows :

“If at any time the movement of commerce by common carriers of this- state or any of them, is interfered with in violation of the provisions of chapter 10, title 14, of the Penal Code, and the Governor, after investigation, becomes convinced that the local authorities were failing to enforce the law either because they were unable or unwilling to do so, ’ the Governor shall, in order that the movement of commerce may not be interfered with, forthwith issue his proclamations declaring such conditions to exist and describing the area thus affected.”

Article 998 provides that upon the issuance of the proclamation the Governor shall exercise full and complete police jurisdiction over the area described in his proclamation, and such police jurisdiction shall supersede the police powers of the local authorities, provided that the Governor shall not disturb the local officers in the exercise of police jurisdiction outside of the designated territory. Article 910 authorizes the Governor to use the state rangers in the enforcement of the provisions of the law. It further provides that, if a sufficient number of rangers is not available, the Governor is authorized to employ others for that purpose, and that such other persons shall have all the powers and authority of the regular rangers and shall be paid the same salary as rangers out of the appropriations made to the executive office for the payment of rewards and the enforcement of the law. The penal provisions of the law are as follows:

“Art. 1094. It shall be unlawful for any one by or'through the use of any physical violence or by threatening the use of any physical violence, or by intimidation or threatening destruction of his property to interfere with or molest or harass any person or persons engaged in the work of loading or unloading or transporting any commerce within this state.
“Art. 1095. It shall be unlawful for any two or more persons to conspire together to prevent or attempt to prevent, by the use of physical violence or intimidation or by threats of physical violence or by abusive language spoken or written to any person engaged in loading or unloading or transporting any commerce within this state, any person from performing the duties of such employment.
“Art. 1096. Every person who shall through any act or written communication or conversation with any person or persons engaged in loading, unloading or transporting any commerce by any common carrier in Texas, or with the father, mother, wife, sister, brother, child or children of such person or persons while so engaged, or during the hours of day or night while not engaged in such work and when employed for such work, which is reasonably calculated, *259

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 257, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-ry-co-v-hudson-texapp-1926.