Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Miller , 98 Tex. 270 ( 1904 )


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  • The defendant in error, who was plaintiff below, was hurt upon the track and within the switch limits of the plaintiff in error, defendant below, at Dougherty, I.T., by an engine which was owned by the Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Railway Company and was operated by its employes over the tracks of the defendant. By the judgment now before us for revision the defendant was held liable for the injury, the trial court having instructed the jury that the fact that the engine was owned by the Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Company and was operated by its servants would not defeat the plaintiff's action. The application for writ of error, which was granted by this court, assumed that it was shown by the evidence that, under authority of an act of Congress relating to railways in the Indian Territory, an arrangement had been made between the two companies for the "use or lease of the railroad" of the defendant by the Atchison Company, under which the latter had the right to use of the tracks, and that its locomotives and trains, in passing over them, were under its exclusive control and direction. U.S. Stats. at Large, p. 431. Such we do not find, upon further examination, to be the state of the evidence. The record is silent as to the nature of the relations existing between the two companies except as they may be gathered from the expressions dropped from the servants who were in charge of the engine in question, while testifying about the facts attending plaintiff's injury. The conductor, engineer, fireman and brakemen testified that they were in the employ of the Atchison Company and that the engine belonged to it; but it further appears from their testimony that the defendant was in possession of its road and was operating it. One of its freight trains was standing on a sidetrack at Dougherty and its passenger train was due there when the accident occurred. Dougherty was one of defendant's "registering stations," where the conductors of passing trains were required to register, showing "name of conductor and engineer, number of cars and number of engine." The registering was done in defendant's station and evidently in accordance with its regulations and for its information. The engine by which plaintiff was hurt had been brought to Dougherty over defendant's track, for the purpose of hauling a gravel train of the Atchison Company over the same road to a gravel pit, south of Dougherty, to get gravel to be used on the Atchison Company's roadbed. As the defendant's passenger train from the south was about due, the engine was stopped at the station to register and to ascertain if there was time, before its arrival, to go to a tank, also south of the station, to get water and return. Learning that there was time, the employes proceeded southward and struck plaintiff before they passed out of the switch limits. It appears that, while the engine belonged to the Atchison *Page 273 Company and was operated by its servants for its benefit, it was run over defendant's road, with its consent, under its train orders sent from Cleburne, and while the road was in its own possession and under its control. All that is shown concerning the arrangement under which this was done is contained in the testimony of the trainmen in such expressions as these: "We do not steal over on the track of the G.C. S.F. without letting them know it. The defendant gave us authority to go. The A.T. S.F. did. We got train orders from the defendant G.C. S.F. We got the orders from defendant's train dispatcher at Cleburne, I suppose." * * * "I suppose the A.T. S.F. paid the G.C. S.F. for the use of its track. I expect the A.T. and G.C. belong to the Santa Fe Route. I expect E.P. Ripley is president of the A.T. and G.C." * * * "They [the A.T. and G.C.] belong to the Santa Fe system. E.P. Ripley is president of the S.F. Pacific, the Atchison and G.C. S.F." * * * "The A.T. S.F. is a member of the great Santa Fe system."

    We think it is clear that this evidence is insufficient to show any state of facts sufficient to exempt the defendant from liability for the injury inflicted on its track, although by an engine of another company. The case is not shown to be one in which one railroad corporation has, by a lease or other contract, executed under lawful authority, surrendered to another the exclusive possession and operation of its road, nor one in which the owning corporation, while conducting its business over its road, has, with like authority, admitted another to the separate and independent use of its tracks, reserving only such control over the trains and locomotives of the other as to make their movements consistent with the operation of its own. It is therefore unnecessary that we consider the effect such arrangement would have, under the act of Congress referred to, upon the responsibility of the defendant for the negligence of the other company in the operation of its trains or engines. The evidence makes it appear only that an engine of the latter company was driven by its servants over the defendant's road with its consent and in accordance with its orders, leaving the case open to the assumption that it had that complete control and direction of the movements of the engine, while on its line, which its ownership entitled and obligated it to have, in the absence of some lawful contract with the other company, limiting its rights and duties in this respect.

    It is a sound proposition, often applied, that the corporation, shown to be owner of a railroad in the operation of which a wrong has been done, is presumed to be in the possession and operation of its road. Ferguson v. Wisconsin Cent. Ry. Co., 23 N.W. Rep., 123; Walsh v. Missouri P. Ry. Co., 14 S.W. Rep., 873; Peabody v. Oregon, etc., Ry. Co., 21 Ore., 121. The fact that the defendant was operating its road is not left to presumption, but is conceded; and the contention is then made that it was not operating this engine, merely because it belonged to, and was in the immediate charge of the servants of, another corporation. *Page 274 But these facts do not tend to show that those servants, while on defendant's line, were not completely under its control, and the other evidence, so far as it goes, tends to show that they were. The presumption to which we have referred puts upon the owner of a railway, on which an injury has been inflicted by moving cars, the burden of showing, at least, that such cars were not operated by it or under its control, and this presumption is not repelled by mere proof that they belonged to and were moved by servants of another. The defendant is therefore as fully responsible to plaintiff for the injury inflicted in the moving of this engine as it would have been had it belonged to it and been in charge of its own servants. In this state of the evidence it would be out of place to enter upon a consideration of the questions that would arise had it been shown that the defendant, under authority of the act of Congress, had made some such an arrangment as those we have referred to above.

    We can not hold that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of those operating the engine, nor that the evidence conclusively established contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. Other points urged for reversal were properly disposed of in the court below.

    Affirmed.