Trinity & Sabine Railway Co. v. O'Brien

46 S.W. 389, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 690, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 164
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 389 (Trinity & Sabine Railway Co. v. O'Brien) 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
Trinity & Sabine Railway Co. v. O'Brien, 46 S.W. 389, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 690, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 164 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Appellee was bitten by a dog at appellant’s depot in Corrigan, and brought this action to recover damages for the injury, alleging that it resulted from negligence on the part of appellant’s agents in charge of the station. The dog belonged to one Mrs. Morgan, who was moving from Corrigan to Trinity, and who led the dog to the station to be shipped on the train on which she and her baggage were to be carried, and delivered it into the custody of a porter in appellant’s employ. There is evidence, which is contradicted, however, that Mrs. Morgan directed the porter to place the dog where he could get to no one, informing him that the animal was likely to bite. The porter tied the dog to a truck upon the platform in front of the waiting room of the station so that the dog could reach the door of that room. There is evidence that both this porter and the station agent had lived at Corrigan, and held their positions for several years, and that the general reputation of the dog was that it was vicious and inclined to bite, and that such was its real character. There is also evidence that the porter had knowledge of this fact besides such as was communicated to him on the occasion in question. About all this there is more or less conflict.

On the day in question (January 8, 1896,) appellee, a young lady of twenty-two or three, in company with other ladies, went to the station for the purpose of taking passage upon the train, and, having traversed the platform leading to the waiting room, had placed one foot in the door of that room when she was seized and bitten by the dog upon the inside of the upper portion of the thigh. She had not purchased a ticket, nor in any way made known to appellant’s agents her purpose to become a passenger over its road.

The nature of the questions to be decided will appear from the assignments considered in the order of their presentation.

Verdict and judgment were rendered for appellee for $8000 actual and for $2000 exemplary damages.

The first point urged for a reversal is, that appellee should not have been permitted to recover any damages, for the reason that the evidence shows that after receiving her injury she neglected to employ ordinary care in having it treated and cured, from which great and unnecessary aggravation of its consequences ensued. A charge expressing this view was requested and refused.

The evidence shows, that after being bitten appellee proceeded on her *692 journey and remained absent two or three days, during which time she Avent to a show and walked about two different toAA'ns making up music classes; that after her return to Corrigan she continued to use the limb, AAralking and dancing at balls; that her first treatment by a physician was more than a month, and perhaps more than four months, after she Avas bitten; that during this time the Avound would at inter\Tals become inflamed and painful, causing fever; that this condition has continued up to the trial; and there is evidence tending to shoAV that her limb has been permanently drawn so as to produce a limp in her walk and to impair and render painful its use. The testimony of expert witnesses tends to sIioav that prompt and proper medical treatment Avould have prevented these permanent conditions.

On the other hand, it appears that appellee within a few days consulted Avith one of her lady friends, showed her the Avounds, and obtained and used such remedies as her judgment dictated; that her modesty caused her to shrink from exposing herself to medical examination; that the wounds were not apparently of a dangeroxis character; that, barring the danger of hydrophobia, blood poisoning, and like secondary consequences, the medical Avitnesses did not consider such injuries to be ordinarily of a very grave character.

The charge given by the court required that appellee should have taken such care of her wounds as a reasonably prudent person would have employed under like circumstances, and permitted her to recover only such -damages as she Avould have sustained if she had taken such care, and not for increased injury attributable to Avant thereof. We think this gave the correct rule. Railway v. McMannewitz, 70 Texas, 76; Allinder v. Railway, 37 Iowa, 264; 5 Am. and Eng. Enc. of LaAv, 2 ed., 693.

Kegligence which alloAvs damage to accumulate is not, like that Avhich helps to cause the injury, a complete bar to recovery. It simply prevents the recovery of damages which proper care would have averted.If appellee established her allegations that she was bitten by the dog through the negligence of appellant’s servants, she Avas entitled to recover such damages as proximately resulted, which Avould include all of the natural consequences of the wound, except such as by the use of the care of a person of ordinary prudence she could have prevented. This is the whole extent to Avhich the doctrine of contributory negligence is applied in such relations. The requested charge was properly refused. As the judgment aaúII be reversed on other points, we refrain from the expression of an opinion upon the facts tending to show negligence on the part of appellee in caring for her wounds, as well as upon the question whether or not the amount of the verdict for actual damages is excessive.

It is next complained that the court permitted appellee to testify, that when she was first examined by a physician he stated to her that she was in danger of hydrophobia, lockjaAAq and blood poisoning, and to the effect which this had upon her mind. The court allowed the evidence, not to prove the facts stated by the doctor, but as tending to show the effect of *693 the injuries upon appellee’s mind. This court is of the opinion that the statements of the doctor should have been excluded. Mental suffering resulting proximately from the bite of the dog formed an element of damage (Goodson v. Blood, 52 Vermont, 251), but the inquiry should have been confined to the proof of such suffering, without bringing in the statements of others of facts which were calculated to mislead the jury.

We are further of the opinion that the court should not have submitted to the jury the question of punitory damages, but should have given the charge requested by appellant, that the evidence made no case for the recovery of such damages. This subject has been so often discussed that we deem it unnecessary .to say more.

The charge of the court required of the defendant, with respect to the care to be used for the keeping of its station safe, that it be such as very prudent persons would use in such situations.

The defendant requested a charge defining the degree of care to be that employed by reasonably prudent persons.

The members of this court differ upon the question whether or not plaintiff when hurt was a passenger, as well as upon the further one as to the degree of care which the carrier owed to her, if a passenger, while at the station and before actually entering upon the cars. Upon both points the authorities may be said to conflict, at least that they apparently conflict. A majority of the court is of the opinion that the charge was erroneous in requiring more than the care which persons of ordinary prudence would employ under the same circumstances, and that the special charge, which substantially defined this standard, should have been given.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 389, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 690, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinity-sabine-railway-co-v-obrien-texapp-1898.