Sweetman v. Laredo Electric & Ry. Co.

204 S.W. 701, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 680
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1918
DocketNo. 6056.
StatusPublished

This text of 204 S.W. 701 (Sweetman v. Laredo Electric & Ry. Co.) 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
Sweetman v. Laredo Electric & Ry. Co., 204 S.W. 701, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 680 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

*702 SWEARINGEN, J.

This is a suit by W. H. Sweetman, the appellant, brought against the Laredo 'Electric & Railway Company, appellee, to recover damages alleged to have been inflicted upon appellant by being shot, while performing the duties of an employe of appellee, by a United States soldier, who was guarding appellant’s power plant. The cause was submitted to the jury in a general charge. A general verdict was returned in favor of appellee, in accordance with which judgment was rendered.

Appellant alleged that appellee had requested and obtained, and was employing, certain soldiers to act as guards of appellee’s power plant, and contiguous yard, land, and ground; that the soldiers were thus employed in the business of appellee, and were under its instructions, or if the soldiers were not employes of appellee, yet appellee knew that they were guarding its property, and knew the danger incident thereto to its employe, the appellant, yet failed to warn appellant of their presence and of the danger thereof, allowing appellant to remain in ignorance of the presence of such dangerous instrumentality as the said guard. It is also alleged that appellee was negligent in its duty to its employs, the appellant, because it failed to notify the soldiers on guard not to injure appellant when he should enter the premises to pursue his usual employment in the usual manner. It was alleged that appellant was in the employ of appellee, and while in the performance of the duties of his employment was negligently injured by being shot by the soldiers on guard. The injuries and damages were alleged.

A general demurrer and denial were pre- ' sented in the answer, which also specially alleged:

“That at the time of the injury to plaintiff there was a general alarm among the people of Laredo, and a feeling and common belief that the city was going to be attacked by Mexicans from across the river, and the United States army officers stationed at Et. McIntosh, on the western edge of the city, especially believed and thought that the city was going to be so attacked ; and to guard against' the same and prevent calamitous results to the citizens of Laredo, as well as to the troops and soldiers so stationed in Laredo, said army officers placed guards at the bridges reaching across the river, at the waterworks plant, at all bridges of importance between Laredo and San Antonio on the International & Great Northern Railway, the United States posit office building, the local telephone exchange, and around the plant and grounds of this defendant, as well as guards at various places up and down the Rio Grande from Laredo, all of which was done by said army officers as a military precaution, for the protection of the inhabitants of the city of Laredo, as well as the United States soldiers and army stores at Laredo. That said guards at defendant’s plant were placed there as an act of military necessity, and not as the agents or employes of defendant. That defendant paid them nothing, and had no control over them. That they were not under its orders, nor stationed at any particular place in or around defendant’s plant by defendant’s direction or suggestion. That said guard was entirely independent of all control or suggestion by this defendant. It further alleges that, to ameliorate the dangers incident to and for the convenience of its employes, and for' their protection, as well as for the protection of its own property, defendant had a designated place near the northwest corner, and in the opposite direction from the point of the expected attack, from which employes and others having legitimate business with the plant were to enter and leave, and all employes were notified thereof, and that the same was a rule of the company. But plaintiff, in utter disregard of such precaution and rule, and in violation thereof, carelessly and negligently attempted to enter said premises from the direction from which an attack was expected, and not from the place so designated by this defendant; and, when so approaching, the guard so placed at said point or place, twice commanded the plaintiff to halt, but, instead of obeying said command, the plaintiff continued to advance toward said premises, when the soldier so on guard fired his gun, -and the plaintiff was wounded.”

Appellant specially excepted to the above-quoted portion of the answer, the overruling of which exception is the basis of the first assignment. The facts are that appellant was shot by United States soldiers, while in the performance of the duties for which he was employed by appellee, about midnight, in the city of Laredo-. The United States of America and the governing power of the republic of Mexico were in an “imperfect” state of war at the time. It was believed that hostile raids would be attempted by Mexican soldiers, and the regular army officials, in the performance of their duty, undertook to guard the public against the destruction of light plants, waterworks, transportation, and public buildings. The soldiers put on guard at appellee’s plant were there by order of the commanding general of the United States Army for the protection of the public interests, and were not there in the private interest of appellee, and were not under his instructions or control, nor at his request. The relation of master and servant did not exist between appellee and the soldiers. Appellant was mistaken by the soldiers for a raider and shot.

The following facts are relevant to the allegation that appellee, the master, was negligent'in the fulfillment of his duty to warn appellant, his servant, of the danger created by the presence of the armed guard, which danger was unknown to- appellant: That the soldiers were guarding the power plant was known to both appellee and appellant. The necessity, purpose, and manner of guarding was known to both. The plant was inclosed by a wall or fence, with two gates for ingress. Entrance through the gates was free of danger from the soldiers. There was a hole broken into the brick wall in the rear of the plant, and it was by way of this hole that appellant entered the night he was shot. There was positive testimony that one of the soldiers called twice to appellant to halt, loud enough to be heard by appellant above the noise of the machinery in operation. Appellant did not heed the command, which caused the shooting. On the other hand, appellant testified that it was the custom of the *703 employés to enter tlie plant through this hole in the wall as he did, and that he was not challenged, hut was shot without warning. The injuries and loss were of course proven.

[1] The first assignment complains of the order of the court overruling appellant’s special exception to that portion of appellee’s answer containing the defense of “military necessity.” The assailed defense is quoted above in our description of appellee’s answer. The overruled exception thereto is as follows:

“Again comes the plaintiff and specially excepts to said first amended original answer, and particularly specially excepting to the first section of the third paragraph of said first amended original answer, and says that the same is wholly insufficient in law and sets np no defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action herein, for this: That in, the absence of a proclamation, and the establishment of martial law, there is no such thing known to the law as ‘military necessity’; and rumors and the acts and beliefs of the United States army officers stationed at Ft.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 701, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweetman-v-laredo-electric-ry-co-texapp-1918.