St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas v. J. K. Hall
No. 1400
Supreme Court of Texas
Volume 98 Texas Supreme Court Reports page 480
March 16, 1905, Decided
History of the case: Error to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth
District, in an appeal from Hunt County.
Reversed end remanded.
Williams, Associate Justice.
Opinion
The defendant in error, who was plaintiff, brought this suit in the
District Court of the Sixty-second District, in Hunt County, to recover
damages for personal injuries which he alleges were caused by the negligence
of the servants of the plaintiff in error, the defendant below, in frightening
and causing his horses to run away and throw him from the wagon to which
they were hitched and which he was driving. He recovered judgment, which
was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals and which has been brought
before this court by writ of error. After the cause was submitted in
this court, a decision was rendered by the Court of Civil Appeals for
the Fifth District holding that the act of the Twenty-eighth Legislature,
organizing the Sixty-second Judicial District, was unconstitutional,
in toto; that the court thereby provided for never had a legal existence
and that proceedings before and judgments rendered by it were void.
The submission of this cause was then set aside upon agreement of the
parties in order that the question as to the constitutionality of the
statute might be argued and finally decided by this court. The question
had in no way been brought to the attention of the trial court, the
Court of Civil Appeals or this court, but, as it is one which affects
the jurisdiction of this court over the cause, it may be raised and
decided at any stage of the proceeding.
Prior to the passage of the act in question, Lamar County was in the
Sixth and Hunt and Delta counties were in the Eighth Judicial District,
and each of these counties had two terms of court each year. This arrangement
was not disturbed by the Twenty-eighth Legislature further than appears
from the statement hereafter given of the provisions of the statute
passed by it. The counties remained, as before, parts of the Sixth and
Eighth districts, respectively, and each was allowed two terms of court
to be held by the judge of the proper district. The statute under consideration
attempted to create a new district composed of these counties and to
provide for a new district court for that district in addition to those
already existing. It provided for the holding of two terms of court
a year by the judge of the new district in each of the counties, except
Delta, in which the time for holding only one term was fixed. It provided
that the new court, throughout the counties of Hunt and Lamar, should
have concurrent jurisdiction, as given by the Constitution and laws,
with the courts already existing, but that the judge of the Sixty-second
District should never impanel a grand jury in those counties "unless
in his judgment he thinks it necessary." With respect to Delta
County, the act provided for the same concurrence of jurisdiction in
the two courts, except that it attempted to deny to the court of the
new district the power to impanel grand juries, to take jurisdiction
of any criminal matter, except for a writ of habeas corpus, and to impanel
juries to try causes, in connection with which provision was made for
the transfer to the other court of all causes in which juries should
be demanded. Provision was also made applicable to all the counties
for the transfer of causes by the judge of one of the courts to the
other. The act also provided that the incumbent clerks of the district
courts of the several counties and their successors should perform the
duties pertaining to the clerkship of both courts of their respective
counties.
It is settled by the decision of this court in Lytle v. Halff, 75 Texas,
128, that, consistently with the Constitution, there may be more than
one district court in a county; or, to express it differently, that
a county may constitute a part of more than one judicial district. This
proposition is not questioned by counsel. It was also strongly intimated
in that case that a provision prohibiting a district court from impaneling
grand juries was unconstitutional as denying to that court a portion
of the jurisdiction given to it by the Constitution over criminal causes,
inasmuch as such jurisdiction over felonies could not be constitutionally
exercised without the aid of grand juries. To this proposition we fully
assent. It was, however, further held, in the case cited, that this
feature of the statute there in question did not affect the legality
of the court established, but that, if it were in conflict with the
Constitution, it would have to give way and leave the court in the full
possession of its constitutional functions. The same reasoning disposes
of most of the previsions of this statute which are attacked as unconstitutional.
If the Legislature did enough to bring into active existence a district
court, it was at once clothed with the powers conferred by the Constitution
upon such courts, and any attempts in the act to unduly limit those
powers must be treated as futile. From this it follows that the provisions
forbidding the court from taking cognizance of criminal matters and
from impaneling juries in Delta County are as ineffectual to diminish
the jurisdiction of this court, if it came into existence, as is the
provision concerning grand juries. The Constitution defines the civil
and criminal jurisdiction of all the district courts and contains provisions
under which the full exercise thereof would be impossible without the
aid of petit juries; and, hence, to deprive any such court of the power
to impanel juries would be to deprive it of an instrumentality essential
to the exercise of its jurisdiction. As was said in Lytle v. Halff,
such a provision, being unconstitutional, can not operate to repeal
or supersede existing laws providing procedure through which this jurisdiction
may be exercised. It is plain, therefore, that these provisions can
not, consistently with the holding in Lytle v. Halff, be allowed to
affect the validity of the statute, as a whole, or the legality of the
court.
The provision most relied on is that fixing a time for the holding
of only one term of the court in Delta County, which is assailed as
being in conflict with section 7, article 4, of the Constitution. That
section provides for the division of the State into districts; and for
the selection of a judge, whose qualifications and salary are fixed,
and who is required to "hold the regular terms of his court at
the county seat of each county in his district at least twice in each
year in such manner as may be prescribed by law." It also empowers
the Legislature to provide for the holding of more than two regular
terms per year and of special terms.
Much that is essential to the existence of the courts is thus prescribed
by the Constitution itself, while some of the things needed to bring
them into active operation are to be provided by the Legislature. The
districts must be formed and the times for holding the courts prescribed
by legislation, and without these there is no court authorized to exercise
the jurisdiction defined by the Constitution. The contention here is
that, although the Legislature has defined the territory to compose
the district and has fixed times for holding the court twice a year
in two of the counties and once a year in the third, it has not done
enough to authorize the appointment of a judge and the holding of court,
because of the omission to provide for a second term in each year in
the third county. To us this contention seems to mistake the nature
of the provision for two terms, by treating it as an inhibition of any
provision for one term. As terms of courts can not be held until times
are prescribed by law, it is plainly the duty of the Legislature to
make such provision. But this is an affirmative command and not a prohibitory
provision. The courts have no power to enforce the performance of this
duty in whole, and, in our judgment, have as little right to strike
down, as unauthorized, a performance of it in part, merely because the
Legislature has not gone as far as the Constitution may require. When
the Legislature has provided for one term in a county, it has not done
a thing prohibited or unauthorized by the Constitution, but has done
a part of that which the Constitution commands it to do. If there had
been no judicial districts when the Constitution was adopted and the
Legislature, in forming them, had provided for only one term of court
in each county in the State, can it be true that the people would have
been deprived of courts because the provision made stopped short of
that intended by the Constitution? If the Legislature, in session in
January, should form a new district or add a county to an existing district
and provide for a term of court in March, and, after that had been held,
the Legislature, being still in session. should further provide for
another term in the same county in September, we suppose no one would
say that the courts could not legally be held under this authority or
that its proceedings would be void. Yet to that proposition we would
inevitably be led by adopting the contention that to the construction
of a valid district and a lawful court antecedent provision for two
terms a year in each county of the district is essential. If the Legislature,
in forming a district, by oversight fails to provide for one of the
regular terms in one of the counties, or, in attempting to so provide,
employs such uncertain language that the time can not be legally ascertained,
would it not be unreasonable in the extreme to hold that the whole act,
the court, and all of its proceedings are to be treated as if they had
never been? We can not yield our assent to a doctrine leading to such
consequences. In our opinion, provision made by the Legislature for
one term of a court a year is within the authority conferred and is
a partial performance of the duty imposed by the Constitution; and,
if it be true that this is not the full measure of such duty, that does
not authorize the courts to say that it is not within the authority.
The decision in Whitener v. Belknap, 89 Texas, 273, does not at all
militate against this conclusion. It only applied the well recognized
rule that a court can only be held at the place fixed by law for its
sessions, which place is fixed by the Constitution at the county seat.
We are not to be understood, however, as holding even that the Constitution
makes it the duty of the Legislature to provide for two terms for every
district court put into operation in a county. It is at least questionable
whether or not the provision in the Constitution for two terms had any
other purpose than to secure to the people of a county at least that
number of terms. Such is the view expressed by Judge Stayton in Lytle
v. Halff. As shown by him in that opinion, while the framers of the
Constitution may not have thought of more than one court in a county,
yet they did not prohibit the Legislature from establishing more than
one court; and the requirement of two terms of the one court provided
by the Constitution may not apply to other courts in a county provided
for by the Legislature. And, hence, it may be that where there are two
courts in a county, one of which holds two terms in a year, the requirement
is met.
We are of the opinion that the statute organizing the court a quo is
constitutional in its provisions establishing the court in all of the
three counties and that the court had jurisdiction to try this cause
and render the judgment appealed from, which makes it necessary that
we consider the grounds urged in support of the writ of error.
Plaintiff's version of the occurrence in which he was hurt is that,
with his wagon and team, he was going south on a street in Wolfe City,
sitting upon some seed cotton with which the wagon was loaded; that,
as he approached a point where several railroad tracks crossed the street,
an engine passed along one of them from the east and stopped a short
distance west of the crossing; that, before trying to cross the track,
he stopped for some moments and saw that the engine was stationary and
that three men upon it were looking toward him and apparently saw him.
Seeing nothing to indicate that the engine would move, he started to
cross, and as he was nearly upon the track the employees upon the engine
caused it to move, or, as he expressed it, to dash forward with the
bell ringing and moving so rapidly as almost to strike his wagon, frightening
his horses and causing them to run and overturn the wagon and hurt him.
The evidence of those with the engine tends to show that it was seventy
or eighty feet from the crossing when plaintiff crossed, that the wagon
had cleared the track before they approached it, and that they ran at
a moderate speed, with no reason to suppose there was any danger to
the plaintiff. The evidence of these witnesses is given with reference
to different points and objects about the locality, of which we can
know nothing, in such way that it is impossible to understand it in
its entirety, but as much as we have just stated may be said of it.
The defendant also introduced evidence that plaintiff said at the scene
of the accident, in answer to a question as to how his team came to
run away, "that they got scared and his lines were down and before
he could get them up they (the team) ran on an embankment."
The court in its general charge instructed, in substance, that, if
the servants of the defendant were guilty of the negligence alleged
by plaintiff (particularizing it), and this was the proximate cause
of the injury to plaintiff, the jury should find for him unless they
should find for defendant "under the instructions hereinafter given." The
only instruction given affirmatively authorizing a verdict for defendant
was the following:
"If you further find from the evidence that plaintiff at said
time and place passed over said railway in a careless, indifferent or
negligent manner; or if you find from the evidence that at said time
plaintiff did not have his team under control, and made no effort to
keep or hold his team under control, but at the time of crossing said
railway permitted the lines to hang loose, or swing loose and hang down
almost to the ground, and that the lines were in such position when
plaintiff's team ran away; and if you find that the plaintiff was thereby
guilty of negligence as that term is hereinbefore defined and that such
negligence, if any, caused or contributed to his injury, you will find
for the defendant."
Upon the issue of defendant's negligence its counsel requested the
following instruction:
"Railway companies have a legal right to run their trains and
engines over their roads and over public crossings, and they are liable
to other persons for such damages only as result from their negligence
or disregard of the rights or safety of such other persons. If you believe
from the evidence that at the time plaintiff drove his team over defendant's
railroad the engine was sixty or more feet away from said public crossing
and was moving at a moderate rate of speed so that plaintiff had ample
time to take his wagon and team over the said railway before the said
engine would reach the crossing, and if you believe defendant's servants
operating the said train at the time acted as men of ordinary prudence
would have acted under the circumstances, then in that event plaintiff
can not recover damages in this suit, and you will find for the defendant."
As we have stated, there was no instruction given affirmatively calling
to the attention of the jury any view of the facts which would acquit
the defendant of liability, except that upon the subject of contributory
negligence. That a party is entitled, when he requests it by correct
instructions, to have the facts establishing his cause of action or
ground of defense, with the law applicable to them, affirmatively stated
by the court to the jury, is the settled rule of practice established
by many decisions of this court. (other cases cited). It is no answer
to a complaint that this was not done that the jury might, negatively,
have inferred the proposition expressed in the request, from the instructions
stating the case of the opposite party. The right is, upon proper request,
to have the law plainly and affirmatively stated in its application
to facts supported by evidence under which the party would be entitled
to a verdict. The instruction in question was applicable to a view of
the evidence which the jury might have taken, and the rule on the subject
required that it be given if it truly stated the law. We are unable
to see wherein it is incorrect. It refers, it is true, to particular
facts, but submits to the jury whether or not those facts existed and
constituted negligence on the part of the defendant. It has no reference
to the question of negligence on the part of plaintiff, and lays down
no rule on that subject, but merely seeks an appropriate instruction
on the question of defendant's negligence.
The defendant also requested several special instructions on the subject
of contributory negligence, all of which appear to be correct, and one
of which should have been given. It is as follows:
"You are further instructed that if you believe from the evidence
that plaintiff drove his team over defendant's railway at the time and
place alleged in the petition, and further believe that at the time
and after crossing said railway plaintiff permitted his lines to hang
loose in such manner that he had no control of his team, and if you
further believe from the evidence that the act of plaintiff in so driving
his team over the said railroad at that time and place and under the
circumstances surrounding plaintiff caused or contributed to plaintiff's
injuries, and if you further believe from the evidence that a man of
ordinary prudeuce would not, under the circumstances then surrounding
plaintiff, have driven his team over said railroad with the lines hanging
loose, then in that event plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this
suit, and you will find for the defendant."
The evidence tended only to prove with reference to the handling of
the lines that they were hanging down, and the requested instruction
sought only to have the question, whether or not plaintiff was negligent
in driving at such a place with his lines in that condition, plainly
and pointedly submitted to the jury. The defendant was entitled to have
this done. The general charge upon this phase of the evidence required
the jury to find, before they could pronounce the plaintiff guilty of
negligence in this particular, (1) that he did not have his team under
control; (2) that he made no effort to control his team; (3) that he
permitted his lines to hang or swing loose and hang almost to the ground;
and (4) that the lines were in such position when plaintiff's team ran
away. The differences between the two charges are too obvious to need
comment. The general charge required proof of a state of facts which
no evidence in the case would have authorized the jury to find, while
that requested related to evidence before them.
It is true that the charge given is in the exact language of defendant's
plea of contributory negligence, but this does not cure the error in
refusing the special charge. That defendant did not prove all it alleged
did not deprive it of the right to have its evidence, which was admissible
under its plea, submitted to the jury. (other case cited.)
The charge of the court submits to the jury, in a general way, whether
or not plaintiff passed over the crossing in a careless, indifferent
or negligent manner, but this was not sufficiently specific to deprive
the defendant of the right to have the particular question raised by
the evidence called to the attention of the jury when it made its request
in a legal way.
The second and fourth requested instructions are so like the first,
although differing from it in some particulars, that it would hardly
have been proper for the court to give more than one of them.
For the errors indicated the judgment will be reversed and the cause
remanded.
Reversed and remanded.