DocketNumber: No. 1970.
Citation Numbers: 204 S.W. 350, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 596
Judges: Hodges
Filed Date: 4/23/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the appellees for the value of a mule killed upon the appellant’s right of way. The owner testified that he fed the animal at night on May 2,1917, and “turned it out to graze.” He found it next morning about 8 o’clock dead and lying near the end of a trestle on appellant’s roadbed. The testimony showed that a part of the fence which inclosed the railway right of way had been removed, and that the animal had entered through that opening some time during the night. Tracks found on the roadbed and about 40 feet south of the trestle indicated that the mule was running north toward the trestle. 1-Iair and blood were found on the ties. The mule’s legs were skinned and its neck broken, but no other abrasions discovered. There was evidence which warranted a finding that some time early on that night one of the appellant’s freight trains passed that point going north. The case originated in the justice court, and the pleadings of the plaintiff were oral. Prom the claim filed and the citation issued the cause of action seems to be founded upon the removal of the fence and in frightening the animal, causing it to run over the trestle.