Texas Central Railway Co. v. Pruitt

110 S.W. 966, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 370, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 S.W. 966 (Texas Central Railway Co. v. Pruitt) 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
Texas Central Railway Co. v. Pruitt, 110 S.W. 966, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 370, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 83 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

— This suit was instituted to recover the value of a mule that was alleged to have been killed by the locomotive of the railway company. The case originated in the Justice Court and was appealed to the County Court, and. from the County Court to this court.

The 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 im *371 mediate south side of the railway track. Upon each side of the track running through this farm the appellant had, some time previous to the suit, erected a fence. About four years previous to the injury complained of, the appellant placed a gate in its right-of-way fence, on each side of the track, to enable the appellee to get to and from the parts of his farm situated on immediately opposite • sides of the track. It is inferable from the record, and we so assume from the evidence, that these gates were made in the right-of-way fence by appellant in compliance with a statutory demand by the appellee for an opening or crossing through the fence. Appellee had nothing to do with, or control over, the gates or openings. The gate on the north side, leading to the pasture and barn, is the one in question in this case. By taking the testimony of the appellant’s section foreman, who built this gate, it was constructed in the first instance as follows: “I took lxé’s and ripped them in two and made lighter gates. The lighter .gates that I put in were called 'slide gates,’ with four horizontal pieces made of 1x3 plank and two perpendicular pieces of plank nailed at each end, and the gate was then placed between two upright posts. At one end of the gate a little piece of plank was put under one of these horizontal 1x3 pieces of plank and nailed to each one of the posts. That held the gate up at that end; and at the other end of the gate there was a little piece of plank that extended out; and •when the gate was fastened to the post it rested upon a little piece of- plank that was nailed to the post; and when that little piece of plank was opened you could slide the gate between the posts, and then it was open. The gate, at the end where it was fastened to the post, was about four feet high, and the gate, at the end, when it was shut, was about 38 inches high when the gate rested on the ground; and when the gate was put upon this little cross-piece on the post it would be about four feet high at both ends of the gate.”

The evidence shows that the appellee turned his mule in the pasture in the late afternoon; and the next morning he found the mule inside the right of way, near the appellant’s track, dead, having escaped from the pasture some time during the night. The appellant’s locomotive fireman testifies that the mule was struck by the engine during the night; that it was not seen by him or the engineer in time to have avoided the injury; that the engine was running down grade at the rate of about thirty miles an hour at the time it struck the mule. The appellee offered some evidence going to show that the mule got over the gate on to the track. The gate was closed that night when the mule was put in the pasture; and was found closed the next morning, when he looked for his mule. It was not through means of the gate being left open that the mule got out of the pasture. Appellee offered evidence tending to show that the gate was out of repair and was defective and insufficient to turn stock, and had been in such condition for several weeks prior to the injury to the mule; and that he had frequently called attention to its condition to the section foreman of the appellant. Appellee testified to the condition of the gate at the time of the *372 injury, and which had been in that condition for several weeks prior ■ to the injury, as being: “The gate was very low; one could step over the end.” “The cross-piece nailed to the post had been broken at one end and would not hold the gate off the ground to the latch on the post, when so resting on the ground you could step over it.” Another witness for the appellee testified to.having himself stepped over the gate just before the injury to the mule. The appellant offered evidence as to the condition of the gate at the time of the injury, through its section foreman, who said that the cross-piece on the gate which had been broken off had been nailed on by him, but was broken off again; and that at the time the mule was injured the gate, when shut, would be 38 inches high at the end resting on the ground, without this piece; that otherwise the gate, at the time of the injury, was in fairly good repair and condition.

The appellant has submitted several assignments of error, which we think in effect reach all to the same question. We have therefore determined to consider the assignments as raising the one question. In his eleventh assignment of error, which we take as the basis of the decision of the question presented, it is complained that the court erred in refusing to give the following special charge:

“If you believe from the evidence the defendant railway company had its right of way fenced at the time and place where 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 the same or similar circumstances, to keep such gate in substantial repair, then you will find for the defendant company.”

The appellant also complains of the charge of the court in this respect, as placing a greater burden on the- railway company than the law requires. The appellant contends that this special charge should have been given, because the liability of the railway company for injuries arising from defects in the gate in the fence enclosing its track, occurring after its construction, depends on whether it has used ordinary care, or been negligent, in performing the duty to repair and maintain it. The court’s main charge may be susceptible of the construction contended for by the appellant, in that it required of appellant the duty “to keep its said gate in repair,” and did not submit the rule of ordinary care as a standard. For the purposes of the decision of the question presented we can take the view of the court’s charge as the appellant contends for. The • question presented is: Does the liability of the appellant in this case depend upon whether it has used ordinary care or been negligent in performing the duty to repair and maintain the gate? If that is the law, then the special charge should have been given.

There are some cases which seem to hold that under our statute, when a railroad has once fenced in its track its responsibility after-wards is only to use ordinary care to keep it in repair. (Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. v. Cash, 8 Texas Civ. App., 569; International & G. N. *373 Ry. Co. v. Erwin, 67 S. W., 466.) These cases seem to be relied on by the appellant as authority for the question presented. But we can not assent to this view of the law. Our conclusion is to the contrary of the rule so announced in these eases.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W. 966, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 370, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-central-railway-co-v-pruitt-texapp-1908.