Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Duff

207 S.W. 580, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1227
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 7, 1918
DocketNo. 8125.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 580 (Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Duff) 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 & P. Ry. Co. v. Duff, 207 S.W. 580, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1227 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

The appellee, R. L. Duff, on February 26, 1916, brought suit in the district court of Van Zandt county against the appellant the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, to recover damages for personal injuries received as a result of the negligence of the appellant. This suit was numbered 3689, and the pleadings and proof of the ap-pellee therein showed that he was standing ■near the appellant railroad track at a public crossing when a freight train of appellant passed, and that a lump of coal fell or was thrown from the tender of the engine drawing the train, struck him on or near the shoulder, knocked him down, and dislocated his hip and otherwise injured him. The appellant railway company pleaded, among other things not necessary to state, the general issue, and specially, in substance and effect, that appellee’s injuries were feigned and his suit for damages fraudulent. The case was tried, and on August 10, 1916, a jury verdict in favor of appellee, ¡Duff, for the sum of $5,000 was rendered, and judgment thereupon duly entered. Later this judgment, according to the pleadings of the appellants, was affirmed on appeal (195 S. W. 1169) and writ of error denied by the Supreme Court. On March 2, 1918, the appellant herein the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, joined by R. H; Stewart and J. Dabney Day, sureties on the supersedeas bond, given by said railway company in its appeal from the judgment rendered on said cause No. 3689; and J. L. Lancaster and Pearl Wright, as receivers of appellant railway company, filed in the district court of Van Zandt county a bill of review, seeking a revision and cancellation of the judgment rendered in said cause No. 3689, and an injunction restraining the enforcement and collection of said judgment; This relief was asked upon allegations charging, in substance, that appellee, Duff, alleged, in his suit No. 3689 for damages, that prior to the accident resulting in the injuries of which he .complained he had been a strong, able-bodied man, capable of doing any kind *581 of work, but that since tbe accident, on account of injuries to his hip and other injuries received at that time he was a confirmed cripple; that upon the trial of said cause appellee procured and introduced false evidence to prove the allegations of his petition, and testified falsely himself as to the extent of his injuries and as to the previous condition of his hip; that he testified that he had never suffered a dislocation of his hip prior to the time of the accident in question ; that he never had any trouble with his hip or back before that time; that while he could, at the date of the trial, walk without his crutch and the brace on his hip “some piece” without falling, provided he walked “right straight and easy” and did not put too much weight on his leg, yet “if he made any kind of a turn he would go down”; that the gravamen of appellee’s “cause of action was an initial dislocation of the hip of which he complained, and that the effect of his testimony and all thereof was that prior to the injury his hip was sound, and that he never suffered any inconvenience therefrom, or a dislocation thereof prior to the accident” ; that all of the testimony given by appellee himself and introduced at his instance was in support of that theory and contention; that appellant has reason to and does believe, and avers the fact to be, that said “testimony was perjured and false”; that appellee knew at the time it was given that it was false, and that it was given for the fraudulent purpose of deceiving the court and jury to the end that appellee might procure a false and fraudulent verdict from the jury against appellant; that in truth and in fact there was no initial dislocation of the hip as the result of the accident alleged to have occurred, but that said hip was unnatural, and had been for a number of years at least, and probably during appellee’s entire life, to the extent that he could at will throw the same out of place or joint and replace the same without pain or inconvenience. The appellants further allege in their bill of review the investigation and efforts made before the trial of appellee’s suit for damages to obtain information as to the cause of the accident complained of, the result thereof, and of appellee’s physical condition prior thereto. It is then alleged that appellant was wholly unable to learn any fact upon which to base the conclusion that appellee had, prior to the injury complained of in said damage suit, any trouble with his hip, or that the same was abnormal in any l-espect, and that appellants had no knowledge at the time of the trial of any fact leading to that conclusion, but that, on the contrary, all the information procured was to the effect that prior to the alleged accident appellee’s hip was normal, and had never then been out of place. It is further alleged that immediately after the trial of appellee’s said suit for damages, appellant proceeded to make investigation into' the truth of the testimony of appellee, “of which it had no information prior to the trial, and none at the trial, save and except logical inferences,” by employing one E. A. Long to learn, if possible, the truth, to the end that it procure justice; that said Long did procure information which confirmed appellant’s belief that the said testimony of appellee was false and fraudulent; that thereafter it employed one Hiram Apel to make further and a more thorough investigation, and that he procured the affidavits of numerous persons to the effect that appellee Duff had, on many occasions, exhibited his ability to dislocate the hip charged to have been injured in the accident in question with scarcely any effort and wholly without pain.

Upon the presentation of appellant’s bill and application Hon. Joel R. Bond, judge of Eighty-Sixth judicial district of Texas, in vacation, granted and directed the issuance of the injunction prayed for upon applicants giving bond in the sum of $12,000, payable and conditioned as required by law. On April 4, 1918, appellee, Duff, filed a motion to dissolve the injunction granted, and prayed that appellant’s bill be dismissed. On hearing in chambers appellee’s motion and prayer were granted, the injunction dissolved, and the bill dismissed. From this action of the court this appeal is prosecuted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 580, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-p-ry-co-v-duff-texapp-1918.