Texas Midland Railroad v. Monroe

216 S.W. 388, 110 Tex. 97, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 105
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1919
DocketNo. 2575.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 388 (Texas Midland Railroad v. Monroe) 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 Midland Railroad v. Monroe, 216 S.W. 388, 110 Tex. 97, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 105 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The ease grows out of what was charged as the negligent shooting *100 of the plaintiff, J. H. Munroe, by the conductor of the train of the railroad company upon which the plaintiff was a passenger.

Another passenger was E. N. Riley. Both were apparently well acquainted with the conductor. At Riley’s request the conductor permitted the two to enter an empty chair-car. not in use in the train, in order that they might privately hold a business conversation. Later, the conductor came through the car. He had in his pocket a small calibre automatic pistol. The plaintiff had seen the ■pistol in his possession upon a previous occasion. The plaintiff’s version of the occurrence was: That the conductor asked him if he had bought “that pistol”—referring to some former conversation between them; Riley asked to see the conductor’s pistol and the latter handed it to him; he inspected it and returned it to the conductor; the conductor then took the clip of cartridges out of the handle and said, “Here’s the way she works,” and the pistol fired, wounding the plaintiff in the leg.

The conductor’s testimony put a different phase upon the happening. In the main, he was corroborated by Riley, According to his statement it was the plaintiff who brought up the subject of the pistol and it was at his request that the pistol was produced and an attempted demonstration made by himself as to the operation of the safety clutch upon it. His version was: That the plaintiff opened the immediate conversation by asking him if he had the little automatic pistol he used to have, and he replied that it was in his pocket; the plaintiff asked to see it, whereupon he removed the clip of cartridges and thinking he had wholly unloaded it, handed the clip to Riley and the pistol to the plaintiff; the latter took the pistol, looked at it, and passed it to Riley; Riley looked at it and handed it back to the conductor; the plaintiff then asked “how it worked” or “how the safety worked” (the conductor’s testimony giving, at different places; the plaintiff’s request in both forms); that he attempted to show the plaintiff the operation of the safety device in response to his request and was engaged in that attempt when the pistol fired. According to Riley, just' before the firing of the pistol, which could only have happened with the safety down, the conductor had demonstrated the impossibility of snapping it with the safety up.

The conductor admitted his intention to pull the trigger with the safety down. That, he claimed, was a way of showing how the safety worked. The shooting was clearly unintentional. The conductor did not inspect the barrel after the clip of cartridges was removed. It is evident, however, that with the clip removed he believed the pistol to be empty.

The jury found that the act of the conductor was negligent, returning a verdict for the plaintiff. The trial court refused the request of the railroad company to submit to the jury, the issues as to whether the conductor was acting within the scope of his *101 employment, and whether the plaintiff was chargeable with contributory negligence. Its right to have had both issues determined by the jury is asserted here by the railroad company.

The display of pistols and demonstration of their mechanism for the instruction of passengers are no part of the ordinary duties of conductors of passenger trains. Experimenting with firearms has nothing to do with the management of a train. The general rule, that for the act of an agent outside the scope of his delegated authority the principal is not answerable, is but a rule of reason and fairness. The responsibility of the principal, founded upon an existence of the agency, ought to cease when the agency is thus repudiated and abandoned, and in the eyes of the law it does cease. In the broad sense, the relationship between a carrier and his conductor is simply that of principal and agent. Otherwise, there could be no just ground for holding the carrier liable for the conductor’s acts and omissions. Upon what theory, therefore, is the carrier chargeable in a case like this, where an injury to a passenger was inflicted by the conductor, negligently, according to the jury’s decision, but while engaged in an act foreign to his ordinary duties f Different courts have dealt with the general question as related to • assaults upon passengers by servants of the carrier—acts equally of an unauthorized nature, as has this court; but it has not before been presented here under a state of facts similar to these. Hence, we have given it some examination.

The responsibility of the carrier for any conduct of his servants entrusted with the carriage of a passenger which results either in his wanton or negligent injury at their hands, regardless of the authority for the particular act, is clear, once the reason for it is correctly apprehended and defined. It can be rendered doubtful in a case like this only by mistaking the ground upon which it' rests.

The foundation of the relation of carrier and passenger is a contract. It is in virtue of the contract, supported by an adequate consideration, that the obligation of the carrier to transport the passenger exists. To benefit from the contract the passenger must accept the mode of conveyance provided. He must largely surrender himself into the carrier’s hands. He entrusts the carrier with his safety. These considerations as enlarged by the hazards of travel, are the source of the doctrine which imposes upon the carrier that high degree of care in the performance of his obligation deemed necessary by the law for the protection of passengers. The passenger contracts not merely for his carriage. He engages for safe carriage and proper treatment. To afford him both is the purpose of the law in requiring of the carrier more than ordinary care in the execution of the contract.

All men are under the obligation of justice and humanity not to wrongfully injure others. A carrier rests under that obligation *102 both as to passengers and strangers. With respect to passengers, however, that general duty is increased by the added duty arising from the carrier’s special undertaking. It is in the fulfilment of this added duty, created by his contract,, that the carrier is required to furnish the passenger that full measure of protection afforded by the exercises of the high degree of care prescribed by the law. This duty of protection extends to violence and insults at the hands of strangers and other passengers. For a stronger reason it applies to the acts of the carrier’s own servants charged with the passenger’s safety.

The duty of the carrier under his contract does not introduce a new rule for the government of the carrier’s liability where there is a breach of the contract by a servant to whom- its performance has been delegated. The rule of respondant superior is still the rule which determines his liability. It is the rule which must govern the liability of any principal when it is sought to hold him responsible for the wrongs or negligence of an agent. Some courts, in affirming the liability of the carrier for injury to a passenger from acts of a servant entrusted with the performance of the carrier’s contract which the carrier had in no way authorized—such as wanton assaults, have treated this question as though the rule of

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 388, 110 Tex. 97, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-midland-railroad-v-monroe-tex-1919.