10 F. Cas. 537 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Texas | 1876
(charging jury). The plaintiff [Patience Gohen is the mother and only surviving parent of Edward L. Gohen, who died without wife or children]
On determining the liability of a railroad for defective construction of work, the correct rule to be looked to is whether such work (no matter what the particular structure may be), is without fault as to plan, mode of construction and character of material, so that it was originally sufficient for all the purposes for which it was designed, so far as could then be reasonably determined, and that it employed skilful and trustworthy agents to supervise and examine and test it, and that such duty is performed with frequency, and with such tests as custom and experience have sanctioned and prescribed. When these circumstances all concur and exist, it may be rightly assumed that the road has exercised such care and skill as the law exacts of an employer in reference to his employee, and that no liability can attach to it for a defect in such structure or work by which an employee has sustained injury, unless there has been actual notice or knowledge that such defect existed, and. which, unless promptly remedied, would be liable to cause serious or fatal consequences. Tested by this rule, the jury will consider the bridge and embankment in question, and determine from all the evidence before them, whether or not they were without fault as to plan, mode of construction and character of materials, and in these respects met the purpose for which they were designed at the time of their construction, so far as could then be reasonably ascertained and determined by the agents and officers of the road who built them. If the jury came to an affirmative conclusion on these questions, and believe that the defendant employed skilful, prudent and competent agents to inspect and keep said structures in repair, and that said agents or employees did exercise ordinary and usual care and diligence in inspecting and keeping said structures in repair, and that they remained safe for the running of trains over them until the embankments were washed away by an unusual and extraordinary rise of water [such as could not have been reasonably foreseen and provided against when the road was originally constructed]^ then you are instructed that the defendant was not guilty of negligence, and you will find for the defendant. [Although the jury may believe, from the evidence, that there was negligence and want of care on the part of the defendant in the original construction of the embankment on which the bridge rested, yet, if they further believe from the evidence that A. E. Botto was engineer of the loco: motive by the fall of which it is charged that Edward L. Gohen was killed, and that at and shortly before the time of the accij dent, the water in Cypress Bayou was unusually high, and that, on the evening previous to the accident, Botto was warned by said defendant, or its authority, that the water was high in the bottom, and that he should run slow over the same, and that he did not obey such warning, but did run over the same the next morning without caution, and with his usual and ordinary speed, or at a rate of speed which, under the circumstances, prevented him from having his engine under proper control, then you are instructed that such conduct on his part was-negligence tending to produce the accident, and you will find for the defendant]
[From 1 Tex. Law J. 97.]
[From 1 Tex. Law J. 97.]
[From I Tex. Law J. 97.]