Texas Central Railway Co. v. Pruitt

109 S.W. 925, 101 Tex. 548, 1908 Tex. LEXIS 210
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1908
DocketNo. 1835.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 109 S.W. 925 (Texas Central Railway Co. v. Pruitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Central Railway Co. v. Pruitt, 109 S.W. 925, 101 Tex. 548, 1908 Tex. LEXIS 210 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Gaines

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Sixth Supreme Judicial District." The statement and questions are as follows:

*549 “The Court of Civil Appeals of the Sixth Supreme Judicial District desiring to certify the hereinafter stated question to the Supreme Court of the State of Texas, makes known to that court that the above styled and numbered cause is now properly and in full requirements of law pending in this Court of Civil Appeals, and pending therein for rehearing on a proper written motion for rehearing legally and properly filed by appellant in the time and manner required by law and with legal notice thereof to appellee, from a determination of the case by this Court of Civil Appeals in written affirmance of the judgment rendered by the trial court.

“The appellee instituted the suit against appellant in the Justice Court to recover $125, the value of a mule that was alleged to have been killed by a locomotive of the railway company. Appellee recovered a judgment against the appellant in the Justice Court, and the appellant appealed to the County Court. The appeal to the County Court was perfected in the manner and terms required by law. In the County Court the appellee, in a trial before a jury, recovered a judgment for $125 against appellant; from which judgment the appellant has perfected an appeal in all requirements of law to the Court of Civil Appeals.

“The allegations in appellee’s trial petition in Justice Court, which were the same in County Court, are to the effect that the mule was run over and killed on the right of way by a locomotive of the appellant which was then being operated on its track; that the mule “was permitted by the railroad company to enter upon its track through a defective gate upon its right of way, and which said gate the defendant permitted to remain in a dilapidated condition.” Appellant answered by general denial, and “that at the time and at the place where the said animal was killed the right of way was enclosed by a good and sufficient fence, and that the gate in said fence at said time and place was in good repair,” and “that the agents and employes were exercising ordinary care at the time in the operating of said train.”

“At the trial of the case in the County Court the court instructed the jury to the effect that if the railway company had fenced its right of way and erected gates in its fence it would not be liable in this case for killing the mule, but if the jury found from the evidence that the company had failed “to erect substantial gates sufficient to turn ordinary stock and to keep its said gates in repair as to substantial defects in such gates the company would be liable.” The appellant requested the following special charge, which was by the court refused:

“ ‘If you believe from the evidence the" defendant railway company had its right of way fenced at the time and place where the plaintiff’s animal is alleged to have been killed, and that gates had been put in on said right of way fence for the use and benefit of the plaintiff in this case, and if you further believe from the evidence that the gate put in by the defendant company was such a gate as a person of ordinary care would build, and that the defendant company used such care as a person of ordinary prudence would exercise under *550 the same or similar circumstances to keep such gate in substantial repair, then you will find for the defendant company.’

“The appellant, in appropriate assignments of error, complains of the court’s charge to the effect (1) that it is not required to erect and maintain a substantial fence sufficient to turn ordinary stock; (2) that the charge requiring the company “to keep the fence in repair” imposes upon the railway a greater degree of responsibility than authorized by law; (3) that the law only imposes a liability upon the company for failure to exercise ordinary care to repair the fence, where the road has once been fenced. Appellant complains that the court should have given the special charge because (1) the railway company is only required to exercise ordinary care to maintain the fence, after it is once erected, and its liability after once the fence is erected is dependent upon the failure to exercise ordinary care to maintain it, and (2) the standard to judge its liability for repair of the fence is ordinary care.

“The facts that gave rise to the court’s charge, and material to the question, are: Appellant’s line of railway runs through the appellee’s farm. Appellee’s house and barn and pasture are situated on the north side, and the cultivated portion of his farm is situated on the immediate south side of the railway track. Upon each side of the track running through this farm the railway company had, some time previous to the suit, erected a wire fence—the height and kind not given in the record. About four years previous to the injury sued for the appellant, in compliance with a statutory demand by appellee, placed a gate in its right of way fence to enable appellee to get to and from the parts of his farm situated on immediate opposite sides of the railway right of way. Appellee had nothing to do with, or control over, the gate, or opening, in the fence. The gate was made of plank, and placed in and as a part of the fence, and arranged so as to slide between posts of the fence, and fastening, when closed, at the end of a post in the fence. This fastening consisted of a little piece of plank that extended out resting on a like plank nailed to the post. The gate when shut was about four feet high at one end and thirty-eight (38) inches at the other end resting on the ground. Appellee turned his mule in his pasture late one evening, and next morning he found the mule inside the right of way, near the appellant’s track, dead, having escaped from the pasture over the gate on to the right of way some time during the night. The appellant’s locomotive fireman testified that the mule was struck and killed by the locomotive of appellant that night, while the" engine was running down grade at the rate of thirty-five (35) miles per hour. The gate was closed when the mule was put in the pasture, and was closed early next morning when appellee began searching for his mule, and it was not through means of the gate’s being left open that the mule got on the right of way. Appellee proved by witnesses that for several weeks prior to the injury the gate was out of repair, and that appellant’s section foreman had been notified of its condition. The condition of the gate at the time of and before the injury is described by the witnesses testifying for appellee; the cross piece for the gate nailed to the post in the *551 fence had been broken at one end and would not hold the gate off •the ground to the latch of the post, and when so. resting on the ground, though closed, it wras so low at that end that a person could step over it, one witness testifying that he did step over. The section foreman for appellant testified that the piece mentioned as broken off had been broken off, but that it did not affect the gate when .shut, as without this piece at this end it'would be about thirty-eight (38) inches high; and that otherwise the gate was in fairly good repair and condition. We concluded that the opening in the fence was insufficient to turn ordinary stock of ordinary disposition.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W. 925, 101 Tex. 548, 1908 Tex. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-central-railway-co-v-pruitt-tex-1908.