63 Tex. 660 | Tex. | 1885
It would be a superfluous exaction of the law to hold railroad companies responsible for injuries occasioned by defective tracks, to require them to maintain sound and safe machinery and other like essential requisites for safe transportation over their roads, if they are to be exempted from liability for injuries resulting from such inattention to causes of peril existing within their right of way as threaten danger, and which proper care is competent to prevent. The general law of the state regulating railroads seems to contemplate and to provide means to such companies for guarding against some of the dangers to which the track is subjected from causes incidental to making embankments, excavations, and from timber liable to fall upon the track. See art. 4168, B. S., which gives to such corporations two hundred feet in width of land for a right of way, and provides that, for the purpose of cuttings and embankments, they may take as much more land as may be necessary for the proper construction of the railway, “ and to cut down any standing trees that may be in danger of fall
It is a matter of common knowledge that cattle run at large in this country, and that their sudden and unexpected appearance on a railroad track, in proximity to and in front of a train in motion, is an obstruction to it which is attended with great danger to the passengers, resulting often in the most serious and tragical disasters.
The facts alleged by the plaintiff in his petition show that on the defendant’s right of way, and quite near to the track, the railway company had, in effect, by permitting bushes to grow to such an extent as to afford a cover to cattle, so that they might from such secret retreats suddenly get upon the track, so endangered the safety of the passing trains as to render it impossible for either care or skill on the part of the company’s servants to prevent a collision with such cattle.
It was alleged, also, that at that point cattle and all kinds of domestic animals were in the habit of roaming across and in the vicinity of the defendant’s track, which fact the defendant well knew; that the danger from such animals remaining concealed in the bushes until too late to avert or lessen the chances of accident rendered it impossible safely to operate trains along that part of the road. The petition alleged the want of diligence of defendant in failing to cut down the bushes, and thus preserving the view of the right of way unobstructed, for the want whereof the alleged accident occurred.
From the facts alleged the court cannot say, as a matter of law, that the defendant was not guilty of negligence, and that no liability can arise upon the facts stated for the injury sustained by the plaintiff. The court erred in determining, upon demurrer, that negligence by the defendant might not be reasonably inferred from the facts alleged by the plaintiff. It is for the jury to say from those facts, when submitted to them, whether negligence, ought to be inferred.
It is undoubtedly true, as a matter of law, that “culpable negligence for which a railroad company may be liable in damages may arise from defects or obstructions allowed to exist in its right of way, where they cause accidents under circumstances that will charge such company with a want of care in preventing their occurrence through such defects or obstructions. T. & St. Louis R’y Co. v. Vallie, 60 Tex., 481. And it is a question of fact, in the given case, whether the omission or neglect, which is imputed as the cause of the accident, constituted neglect or not.
The principle must alike be applicable elsewhere on the railroad’s line of track besides at crossings; but whether in a given instance or occurrence of accident in any particular case, the obstruction or defect complained of in the right of way inducing it constitutes negligence in the cotnpanjr for which it shall be held liable, is a question of fact. If on the face of the petition under the facts alleged such negligence might properly or reasonably be inferred, as before remarked, the petition ought on demurrer to be held sufficient.
Employees of the railroad company are under the protection of the rule of law which holds the company responsible for neglect in respect to its right of way. See Railroad Co. v. Marcelles, 59 Tex., 334; Railroad Co. v. Vallie, 60 Tex., 481; Railroad Co. v. McNamara, 59 Tex., 255; Railroad Co. v. Dunham, 49 Tex., 189. On the proposition that negligence or not is a question for the jury, see Railroad v. Randall, 50 Tex., 254; Railroad v. Craves, 59 Tex., 330; Railroad v. Murphy, 46 Tex., 360; 59 Tex., 373; 58 Tex., 434.
Do the facts alleged show that the cause of the injury was too remote to entitle the plaintiff to recover? If under any view of them which, under adduced evidence concerning the allegations made in the petition, it could be shown that, a construction train of cars being operated as they ordinarily are required to be operated in going back and forth upon the road, it might reasonably have been foreseen and anticipated by the defendant that thick bushes like those described, situated as they were relatively to the road track, might, in the ordinary course of things, cause such an accident from cattle thus hidden from view as did occur, the damage resulting therefrom would not be too remote, but would be sufficiently proximate to warrant a recovery. “ An act is the proximate cause of an injury
The petition was not subject to the demurrer on that ground. “ What is the proximate cause of an injury is ordinarily a question for the jury, and is not a question of science or legal knowledge.” Jones v. George, supra, and the authorities there cited; and see McAfee v. Croiford, 13 How., 454.
The demurrer admits the truth of all the facts alleged, and we think, under such a concession, that it follows that the plaintiff set forth a cause of action. We are of the opinion that the judgment ought to be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reveesed and demanded.
[Opinion adopted March 27, 1885.]