Texas & New Orleans Railroad v. Parsons

113 S.W. 914, 102 Tex. 157, 1908 Tex. LEXIS 256
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1908
DocketNo. 1887.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 914 (Texas & New Orleans Railroad v. Parsons) 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 & New Orleans Railroad v. Parsons, 113 S.W. 914, 102 Tex. 157, 1908 Tex. LEXIS 256 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

*159 The Texas & Niew Orleans Bailroad Company owned and operated in 1903 a railroad from Houston to a place called Echo in Orange County, at which latter place were located a depot, shops and yards. The yards extended about two miles in length and in width sufficient to embrace five separate tracks, all being enclosed by a fence on each side the length of the yards. Within the enclosure were all improvements and buildings which were located at Echo, including a hotel at which the railroad employes boarded. The railroad company had a large number of hands employed in the shops and otherwise about its yards. At times there were many cars standing upon the tracks inside of the yards loaded and unloaded. A large number of transient persons, tramps, etc., collected about the place and frequently built fires outside and near to the fences. On several occasions they interfered with the railroad men in their work and it was not infrequently the case that depredations were committed upon the property, cars were broken into, etc. These conditions became so bad that the yardmaster reported to his superior officer, who applied to B. M. Johnson, then sheriff of Orange County, to appoint two deputies to be located in said place, Echo, to serve in protecting the property and premises of the said railroad company from trespassers and from depredations and to enforce the law against all persons who might violate it. Johnson at first declined to make the appointment, ■ on the ground that he could not afford to pay the deputies for their services. The railroad company agreed that it would pay the monthly salaries of each deputy so appointed, and upon this agreement Charles A. Futch and one Prejean were appointed and stationed as deputy sheriffs at said nlace. The only instruction that Johnson gave to the deputies was to enforce the law and there is no evidence that any officer of the railroad company gave to said deputies any instructions. It seems to have been assumed by the deputies that they were to act as watchmen over the railroad property and they so acted. One of them was on watch in the day and kept the yards under supervision, going from point to point protecting the property from trespassers, the other was on guard or watch during the night and likewise made the rounds as often as was necessary among the cars that might he standing upon the tracks to protect the property against depredations and the enclosure against trespassers. It was the duty of the said watchmen, if they saw persons trespassing upon the yard of the company, to put them out of the enclosure, which they did whenever such trespassers appeared. The two appointees of the sheriff continued their services from the times of their appointment up to December 18, 1905, something more than two years, during which time their wages or salaries were paid by the month by the railroad company.

On the 18th day of December, 1905, Parsons with a number of other persons entered a box ear on the Texas & New Orleans Bailroad at Beaumont and remained in it until the car reached Echo, about two' o’clock the next morning. An employee of the railroad company came to the car and saw that there were persons inside, and when he opened the door and told them to get out they refused to do so, *160 whereupon he shut the door and moved the ear down to a point near the hotel where Futch was, and, by direction of the yardmaster, telephoned to Futch to come over, there were some hobos in a car. Futch went over to the car and when the railroad employee opened the car door Futch had his pistol in his hand and ordered the men in the car to get out, which they did. He then told them that he did not intend to arrest them, and had not arrested them for riding in the car, but he intended to put them off of the company’s property, and ordered them to walk down the track towards the end of the yard. 'He told them if they did not move along that he would shoot just to see them jump, or some such language. After they had gone about three hundred yards down the track they met another man going in the opposite direction, who asked Futch for a match and also asked him when a train would go west. Just what occurred is somewhat in doubt as the witnesses differ about the facts; but taking Futch’s statement, he took the man who approached him to be one of the party that he was marching down to the end of the yard and ordered him to stop, not to come to him, but to go to his crowd. The man had nothing in his hands, made no threats, but Futch thought he was trying to get hold of him and fired at him, the ball striking Parsons in the leg, inflicting a wound that made amputation of the limb necessary.

Futch testified that he did not receive any orders from the railroad officials, and. the yardmaster testified that he never gave him any orders. It was also proved that the railroad officials at one time tried to get Johnson, the sheriff, to remove Futch because the latter would not obey orders of the railroad officers.

The first question which presents itself is in what character did Chas. A. Futch act at .the time the injury was inflicted on Parsons? The fact that Futch was a deputy sheriff does not prove that his acts were official, neither would the fact that he was likewise a watchman employed by the railroad company, prove that his acts were those of a servant; that question must be determined by all the circumstances and facts placed in evidence. Dickson v. Waldron, 135 Ind., 507, 41 Am. St. Rep., 441.

The- lawless condition of things at Echo and the- exposure of the property of the railroad company to depredations by the tramps who assembled there prompted the railroad company to apply to the sheriff of Orange County for the appointment of two deputies, the purpose of the company being to secure protection for the private property of the corporation. The sheriff had no authority to appoint or to detail deputies to act as guards and watchmen over the property of the railroad. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Hackett, 24 S. W., 881. In that case the court said: “An officer of the law can not engage as such officer to guard the property of a private individual or corporation not in the custody of the law.” We do not mean' to say that an officer may not watch property to prevent threatened injury. It follows that whatever authority Futch had to .guard and watch over the property of the railroad company and to expel from' its premises trespassers thereon must have been derived from the company and not from the sheriff. Futch testified that he had an *161 thority to expel persons who were trespassing upon the property of the company and that he had exercised that authority during his stay there, and it appears from the testimony that he had been so engaged continuously for about two years time. During the time that Dutch was so engaged the railroad company had paid his monthly wages without objection. It does not appear that there was any business to be transacted by Dutch at that time and place except that which pertained to the property of the railroad company, except that on a few occasions one of the deputies may have served a subpoena or some process from the court.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 914, 102 Tex. 157, 1908 Tex. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-new-orleans-railroad-v-parsons-tex-1908.