145 S.W. 666 | Tex. App. | 1912
The court charged the jury as follows: "If you believe from the evidence that the defendant had allowed bushes to grow up and remain on its right of way at a point just east of where the plaintiff was injured, and that, in consequence thereof, those in charge of the locomotive in connection with which the plaintiff was working could not see the horse which afterwards struck plaintiff, and that as a result of allowing the bushes and brush to grow upon its right of way the place at which the plaintiff was injured was not a reasonably safe place under all the circumstances of the case at which plaintiff could work, and that the defendant had failed to exercise reasonable care in allowing said bushes and brush to grow or remain on its right of way, and that such failure under all the circumstances of the case constituted negligence, and that plaintiff received injuries as a result of the brush and bushes being so allowed to grow upon the right of way of defendant, then you will find a verdict for the plaintiff." The appellant by proper assignment contends that it was error to authorize a verdict for appellee for the failure to remove the bushes in evidence from the right of way, because the evidence conclusively shows that the bushes being on the right of way was not the proximate cause of the injury to appellee.
It was claimed by the plaintiff in Eames v. Railway Co.,
It is not sufficient merely to prove negligence, but it devolves upon the plaintiff, in order to recover, to also prove that such negligence, if any, was the proximate cause of the injury.
Speaking to the proof in this record, it was error, for the reason given, to authorize a recovery distinctively on the alleged ground here complained of, and, as we cannot say that the jury did not found its verdict upon this part of the charge, such error constitutes reversible error.
The sixth, seventh, and eighth assignments of error complain of the refusal to give certain special charges bearing upon contributory negligence. These special charges required the jury, upon the finding that the acts stated therein constituted contributory negligence, to return a verdict relieving the company of any liability. According to the record here, the injury occurred November 9, 1909, and the suit was filed and trial had subsequent to that date. The Act of April 13, 1909, p. 279, relating to contributory negligence, was then in force. In consequence, speaking to those special charges as offered, it was not error for the court to refuse them.
It is not likely that the questions presented by the other assignments will arise on another trial, and such assignments are not here considered.
In passing we expressly state that it should not be understood from any statement herein made of the facts proven that we think the act of the engineer was the negligence proximately causing the accident. We *669 do not directly or indirectly pass on that question, nor any other of the alleged grounds of negligence, as none of the other grounds besides the willow growth are in any way before us for ruling.
The judgment is reversed for the error indicated, and the cause remanded for a new trial.