
    FOX et al. v. DALLAS HOTEL CO.
    (No. 3101.)
    (Supreme Court of Texas.
    April 19, 1922.)
    1. Master and servant &wkey;>354 — Recovery under original Compensation Aot did not bar recovery from third person.
    Under the original Workmen’s Compensation Act (Acts 33d Leg. [1913] e. 179 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246h-5246zzzz]), recovery of and settlement with the insurance carrier does not bar recovery from a third person by whose negligence the injury was caused; there being no provision to that effect.
    2. Master and servant &wkey;>389 — Insurance carrier not subrogated under original Compensation Act.
    Under the original Workmen’s Compensation Act (Acts 33d Leg. [1913] c. 179 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246h-5246zzzz]), the insurance carrier paying the compensation is not entitled to subrogation against a third person whose negligence caused the injury; there being no question of independent contractor or subcontractor to bring the case within part 2, § 6, of the act.
    3. Negligence &wkey;j2 — One taking over, control and repair of elevators owes duty of ordinary care to one using them.
    On defendant taking over the control and repair of the elevators in a building it became charged with the common-law duty to one rightfully using them, as a night watchman in the employ of the lessee of part of the building, to exercise ordinary care to maintain them in a condition of reasonable safety for use; and this irrespective of any contract between defendant and such lessee.
    4. Trial <§=»352 (5) — Each group of facts relied on as contributory negligence to be submitted separately.
    Under Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 1971, 1984a, 1983, as to submission of all controverted fact issues, whether the judgment is to be entered on special or general verdict, each party has the right to have all fact issues submitted, and so special issues on contributory negligence should be framed to submit separately each group of facts relied on and pleaded and supported by proof as constituting contributory negligence.
    5. Trial <&wkey;350(5) — Question of negligence be-1 ing proximate cause of injury to be submitted to Jury.
    Defendant is entitled to have submitted to the jury for determination the question whether its negligence, if any, in not maintaining an elevator in proper condition for use was the proximate cause of injury to a watchman' attempting to operate it.
    6. Negligence &wkey;U24(l) — Evidence thalifiJWner of one building was chief sfockhol^Mof owner of another held not immaterial.
    That B., owner of the building in-which plaintiff, employee of the lessee of part thereof, was injured by an elevator being out of
    condition, was chief owner of the stock of a company owning and operating a hotel building united by a tunnel with the B. Building for purpose of transmitting power, etc., to such building from the hotel, held not immaterial evidence in action to hold the hotel company liable on the ground of negligence, on the theory that it had taken over the control and repair of the elevators.
    Error to Court of Civil Appeals of Seventh Supreme Judicial District.
    Action by Gussie Eox and others against the Dallas Hotel Company. Judgment for plaintiffs was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals (196 S. W. 647), and plaintiffs bring error.
    Affirmed, with directions for new trial.
    Etheridge, McCormick & Bromberg, of Dallas, for plaintiffs in error.
    C. C. English, A. P. Wozencraft, and Murphy W. Townsend, all of Dallas, for defendant in error.
   GREENWOOD, J.

This was a suit by-plaintiff in error Mrs. Gussie Fox, for herself and as guardian of her two minor children, to recover of the defendant in error, Dallas Hotel Company, actual damages on account of injuries causing the death of Alexander Fox, the husband of Gussie Fox and the father of the minors'.

Alexander Fox was a night watchman for A. Harris & Co., Incorporated, doing a mercantile business at Dallas in the first five floors and basement of a building of sixteen stories leased from Adolphus Busch. While using- a hydraulic elevator extending from the basement to the sidewalk in the regular performance of his duties as a watchman, Fox was caught beneath the elevator and sustained injuries from which he died.

Adolphus Busch owned the ■ Busch Building and owned over four-fifths of the stock' of the defendant in error, Dallas Hotel Company, a corporation, which owned and operated the Adolphus Hotel. The hotel and the Busch Building were united by a tunnel, for the purpose of transmitting power, light, heat, and water from the power plant in the hotel to the Busch Building. The Busch Building, above the basement and lower five stories, was used for offices. There were nine passenger elevators, operated by means of electric power, in the Busch Building, four for the store of A. Harris & Co., and five for the offices. A freight elevator and a dumb-waiter were also in the store, both being operated by electric power.

It was alleged by plaintiff in error that defendant in error had undertaken in behalf of A. Harris & Co., and had agreed with A. Harris & Co., for compensation received, to supervise all the elevators in the Busch Building and to keep them in such repair as to be reasonably safe for the use of the employees of A. Harris & Co., knowing that they were to be used by said employees, including Alexander Eox; that defendant in error had the charge, management, and control of the elevators; that Alexander Fox was using the hydraulic elevator in discharging his customary duties on the night of January 30, 1914, when the elevator became stuck, when about halfway down the shaft, because of defendant in error’s negligence in permitting same to become out of repair and dangerous; that thereupon Alexander Fox undertook to ascertain the defect in the elevator, when it suddenly shot downward, catching and crushing his legs and inflicting injuries from which he died, such injuries being the proximate result of the negligence of defendant in error in its failure to keep the elevator in a state of repair so as to be reasonably safe for use.

Defendant in error pleaded, among other defenses, that plaintiff in error had recovered and collected a judgment against the Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York for $2,804.21, in a suit brought by plaintiff in error against said company and A. Harris & Co. for the damages sustained by the widow and children of Alexander Fox from his death as the result of the injuries he had sustained on January 30, 1914, while engaged in the work of his employment by A. Harris & Co.; that in said suit a recovery was sought against A. Harris & Co. on allegations that the injuries to Fox were the proximate result of negligence on the part of A. Harris & Co.' in. failing to properly maintain the hydraulic elevator which inflicted said injuries, and in failing to furnish Fox a reasonably safe place to work and reasonably safe appliances with which to perform his duties; that a recovery was sought of the Fidelity & Casualty Company on allegations that it had become bound to pay plaintiff in error $2,804.-21 as the present value of the balance due of the compensation to which plaintiff in error had become entitled under the Employers’ Liability Act (Acts 33d Leg. c. 179 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246h-5246zzzz]), by reason of the Fidelity & Casualty Company having agreed with A. Harris & Co. to insure the payment of the compensation specified in the act to injured employees and to the beneficiaries of deceased employees. Defendant in error further pleaded that in said suit final judgment was rendered that plaintiff in error take nothing by her suit against A. Harris & Co., and that, after said judgment, plaintiff in error had executed a release unto both A. Harris & Co, and the Fidelity & Casualty Company from all liability by reason of Fox’s injuries and death in consideration of the payment of said judgment and certain weekly installments previously paid by the Fidelity & Casualty Company.

Defendant in error further properly pleaded that the injuries to Fox were proximately caused by his own contributory negligence in the following particulars: (1) That Fox in order to look under the elevator needlessly placed his body in a position where he would be injured if the elevator should descend; (2) that he failed to overcome the sticking by operating the elevator up and down; (3) that when the elevator stopped he failed to lock it in position; (4) that he went under the elevator without having locked it; and (5) that in working under the elevator he failed to get entirely in the pit.

To our minds, the uncontradicted evidence established that defendant in error had, pri- or to the injuries received by Fox, to sub-serve its own interests, placed engineers in active and actual charge and control of the elevators in the Busch Building, whose duty it was to repair same, and that such action was taken by defendant in error with the approval and acquiescence of A. Harris & Co. and with the understanding that A. Harris & Co. would make suitable contribution to the compensation of such engineers, though the amount of such contribution was not definitely determined until subsequent to the death of Fox.

There was sufficient evidence to raise a question of fact as to each of the distinct grounds of contributory negligence set up in the answer of defendant in error.

Plaintiff in error excepted to so much of the answer of defendant in error as pleaded in bar of this suit the previous suit and judgment and release between her and A. Harris & Co. and the Fidelity & Casualty Company, because it appeared from the answer that the sums paid to plaintiff in error were in discharge of a contractual liability-arising under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, and hence same afforded no defense to plaintiff in error’s suit against defendant in error, in whole or in part. The district court sustained this special exception.

The district court refused a requested charge directing the jury to find for defendant in error on the ground that defendant in error owed no duty to maintain and repair the hydraulic elevator, and, instead, gave a charge to the jury to the effect that defendant in error owed to Alexander Fox the duty to exercise ordinary cáre to maintain the elevator in question in a reasonably safe condition for his use.

In answer to special questions, the jury found that defendant in error negligently perjgLtted the packing around the plunger ofip|ffi hydraulic elevator to be too tight; thaPfeuch negligence occasioned the death of Alexander Fox; that in his conduct in, around, and about the elevator or its shaft, prior to or at the time of the injury, Alexander Fox was not guilty of contributory negligence; and that $3,000 was the amount of actual damages sustained by the widow and by each child.

Objection was made to the question submitted to the jury with regard to Fox’s contributory negligence because it did not present separately each of the grounds of con-' tributory negligence which were pleaded and proyen, and special charges were requested by defendant in error asking a separate submission of the distinct matters relied on as constituting contributory negligence on the part of Fox. The objection was overruled, and the special charges were refused.

On the jury’s special verdict, judgment was rendered by the district court that plaintiff in error recover $9,000 of defendant in error.

On appeal the Amarillo Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment, holding: (1) That there was error in sustaining plaintiff in error’s special exception to the plea by defendant in error of the suit and judgment and release as between plaintiff in error and A. Harris & Co. and the Fidelity & Casualty Company, because the same were conclusive against plaintiff in error’s right to recover; anything of defendant in error; (2) that there was error in the charge that defendant in error owed the duty to Fox to exercise ordinary care to maintain the elevator in a reasonably safe condition for his use, because such duty depended on whether defendant in error had agreed with A. Harris & Co. to keep the elevator in repair, and the evidence as to whether such an agreement was made was conflicting; and (3) that there was error in the court’s submission of the issues arising under the pleas of' contributory negligence and in the refusal of the defendant in error’s requested special charges on contributory negligence.

We agree with the Court of Civil Appeals that the settlement between plaintiff in error and A. Harris & Co. and the Fidelity •& Casualty Company, according to the averments of defendant in error’s answer, was under the Employers’ Liability Act. The first question we will determine is whether the settlement and the judgment on which it was based precluded a recovery herein by plaintiff in error.

Under the 1917 amendment to the Employers’ Liability Act (Acts 35th Leg., c. 103 [Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. iSupp. 1918, arts. 5246 — 1 to 5246 — 91]), it is expressly provided that, where the injury for which compensation is payable arose under circumstances creating a liability against some person other than the subscribing employer, the employee may, at his option, proceed against either the third person or the insurer (the association), and, if he elects to proceed against the third person, he shall be denied compensation under the act, and that, if he claims compensation under the act, then the insurer shall be subrogated to the rights of the injured employee, provided that,’in'.case the insurer recovers of the third person a sum greater than was paid by the insurer, besides the reasonable cost of such recovery, the excess shall go to the injured employee or his beneficiaries. . ■

The original 1913 act, under which plaintiff in error effected a settlement as pleaded by defendant in error, dealt entirely with the liability of the employer to the employee or his beneficiaries, save in section 6 of part 2 of the act, which section obviously applied to an entirely different state of facts than those of this case.

The employer who did not become a subscriber under the' act continued liable for his negligence, being deprived of certain common-law defenses. The employer, however, who did become a subscriber was no longer liable for injury or resulting death to his employee, except for exemplary damages -for death occasioned by the willful -act or omission or gross negligence of the employer.

So far as actual damages were concerned, A.. Harris & Co. having become a “subscriber” under the act, neither Fox ñor his beneficiaries had' any cause of action against A. Harris & Co. As a subscribing employer, A. Harris & Co., Incorporated, was freed of all duties save with respect to acts and omissions which would have warranted the imposition of exemplary damages, and suph acts or omissions in no wise enter into the facts of this case. It is perfectly plain, therefore, that A. Harris & Co. cannot be regarded as a tort-feasor liable to plaintiff in error for damages on account of the injuries resulting in Fox’s death. Plaintiff in error was required to look alone to the Fidelity & Casualty Company, which had, by contract, insured the payment of the compensation provided by the act. By its policy-the Fidelity & Casualty Company had promised and agreed to make the payments specified in the act to A. Harris & Co.’s injured employees or to their beneficiaries. The judgment collected by plaintiff in error, together with previous weekly payments, discharged the contract obligation of the Fidelity & Casualty Company. To that contract, defendant in error was a stranger, and it certainly can derive no benefit from the contract by its negligence resulting in the death of Fox, though it be liable therefor in actual damages under another statute.

In Boyd’s Workmen’s Compensation, § 67, it is stated:

“The new obligation of the employer to his employee is rather a wage obligation in the nature of an undertaking thrust upon the employer, as a part of the contract of employment, to become party to an insurance policy created by law and to be entered into as additional consideration for the services rendered by the employees. The obligation falls within the domain of contract, and this involves a sphere of constitutional law pertaining to the subject of the regulation of contracts.”

The 1913 act nowhere provided for the release of a third person from liability to an injured employee or his beneficiaries, because of a settlement under the act, nor did it declare, save in the above-mentioned section 6, in part 2, any subrogation of the employer or insurer to the rights of the injured party or of his beneficiaries against the third party. The act did not, as did the statutes of many states, and as does the amendment of 1917, require the injured employee or his beneficiaries to elect whether to proceed against the insurer for the compensation allowed by the act or against a third person for damages from his tort. Having found that compensation under the act is recoverable through enforcement of a contractual obligation, we cannot conclude, in the absence of any language in the act declaratory of such intent, that collection of the compensation specified in the act can prevent the recovery from a third person by the injured employee or his beneficiaries of damages for negligence proximately causing the injury.

liability acts in the form of the 1913 act have often been construed as authorizing an employee to receive compensation for an injury under the provisions of the acts, without depriving him of the right to maintain an action for damages against a third person whose tort caused the injury. Mercer v. Ott, Com’r, 78 W. Va. 629, 89 6. E. 952; Smale v. Wrought Washer Mfg. Co., 160 Wis. 331, 151 N. W. 803; Bryant v. Fissell, 84 N. J. Law, 72, 86 Atl. 458; Newark Paving Co. v. Klotz, 85 N. J. Law, 432, 91 Atl. 91; Jacowicz v. D., L. & W. R. R. Co., 87 N. J. Law, 273, 92 Atl. 946, Ann. Cas. 1916B, 1222.

We think our construction effectuates the principal purpose of the 1913 act, which was to shield the employee, to a restricted extent, from the consequences of injuries received in the course of his employment, by insuring the payment of weekly indemnities for either the period of disability or a very limited time. The protection furnished by the act is closely analogous to that provided by accident insurance, where the insurance company is refused subrogation to the claim of the insured against a third person whose negligence, occasions the injury for which compensation is collected of the company. Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Parker & Co., 96 Tex. 287, 72 S. W. 168, 580, 621.

A similar question to that under consideration was presented by the contention of a railway company that- it could not be held liable for time lost by a passenger from injuries sustained in a wreck occasioned by the company’s negligence, where, under a contract with the passenger’s employer, or by grace of the employer, the passenger’s regular wages were not discontinued. The contention was disposed of by the decision that—

“If the continuance of his wages was a provision of his contract, or a grace of his employers, the defendant was not entitled to the benefit of either.” M. P. Ry. Co. v. Jarrard, 65 Tex. 566.

Had the Legislature intended to entirely relieve strangers to the Liability Act from the payment of actual damages arising' from their torts, recoverable under another statute, through settlements under the act, it cannot be doubted that such intent would have been expressly and plainly declared. Where the Legislature has not seen fit to extinguish a liability created by statute by either express repeal or by any reasonable implication from the language of a subsequent act, it is- plainly our duty to enforce the liability. Cole v. State, 106 Tex. 472, 170 S. W. 1036.

The Austin, Beaumont, and Dallas Courts of Civil Appeals have decided that the receipt of compensation under the 1913 act did not prevent an injured employee from maintaining an action against a third person for actual damages arising from the injury as the proximate result of negligence of the third person, nor subrogate the insurer to the injured employee’s claim against the third person. City of Austin v. Johnson (Tex. Civ. App.) 204 S. W. 1181; Southern Surety Co. v. Houston Lighting & Power Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 203 S. W. 1115; T. & P. Ry. Co. v. Archer (Tex. Civ. App.) 203 S. W. 796. Writs of error now pending were granted in the two first mentioned cases because of .the' importance of the question determined.

Upon defendant in error taking over the control and repair of the elevators, to promote its own interests, it became charged with the duty, declared in the instructions of the trial court, to exercise ordinary care to maintain the elevators in a condition of reasonable safety for use. This duty to one using the elevators depended in no wise on. any contractual obligation in favor of the user from defendant in error. The duty is grounded on the obligation to exercise ordinary care in an undertaking which cannot otherwise be carried on without endangering the lives and limbs of others. An elevator such as that in which Pox was injured is a structure designed and maintained for use by human beings. Death or bodily harm to a fellow being is the natural consequence of failure to keep the elevator in repair. Having brought under its control a mechanical appliance, which was, or should have been, known to be attended by grave risks, defendant in error was under the specific, legal duty to exercise ordinary care to protect those for whose use the appliance was provided against the risks it foresaw or should have foreseen.

Plaintiff in error’s cause of action is not for breach of the contract between defendant in error and A. Harris & Co., but is for damages sustained from defendant in error’s tort. Osborne v. Morgan, 130 Mass. 104, 39 Am. Rep. 437. Defendant in error cannot be excused for negligently killing Alexander Fox, because it had a contract with A. Harris & Co. under which it had agreed to perform what might have been one of A. Harris & Co.’s nondelegable duties to Fox. The duty not to negligently do anything to the hurt of Alexander Fox was imposed on defendant in error, not as agent of Harris & .Co., but as a corporation responsible for its own tort. Kenney v. Lane, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 150, 36 S. W. 1063; Railway Co. v. Bass (Tex. Civ. App.) 140 S. W. 861; Packing Co. v. Clem (Tex. Civ. App.) 151 S. W. 576; 2 C. J. 498; 5 Thompson Neg. § 5771; Tippecanoe Loan 6 T. Co. v. Jester, 180 Ind. 357, 101 N. E. 915, L. R. A. 1915E, 735; Southern Ry. Co. v. Reynolds, 126 Ga. 659, 660, 55 S. E. 1039; Morey v. Shenango Furnace Co., 112 Minn. 530, 127 N. W. 1134; Ellis v. McNaughton, 76 Mich. 240, 242, 42 N. W. 1113, 15 Am. St. Rep. 308; Wells v. Hansen, 97 Kan. 305, 154 Pac. 1033, L. R. A. 1916F, 569, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 230; note 25 L. R. A. (N. S.) 343.

In Baird v. Shipman, 132 Ill. 18, 23 N. E. 384, 7 L. R. A. 128, 22 Am. St. Rep. 504, the Supreme Court of Illinois fully concurred in the following declaration by the Presiding Judge of the appellate court for the first district, viz.:

“An agent is liable to his principal only for mere breach of his contract with his principal. He must have due regard to the rights and safety of third persons. He cannot, in all cases, find shelter behind his principal. Jf, in the course of his agency, he is intrusted with the operation of a dangerous machine, to guard himself from personal liability he must use proper care in its management-and supervision, so that others in the use of ordinary care will not suffer in life, limb, or property. Suydam v. Moore, 8 Barb. 358; Phelps v. Wait, 30 N. Y. 78. It is not his contract with the principal which exposes him to or protects him from liability to third persons, but his common-law obligation to so use that which he controls as not to injure another. That obligation is neither increased nor diminished by his entrance upon the duties of agency, nor can its breach be excused by the plea that his principal is éhargeable.”

In approving the doctrine of Baird v. Shipman, supra, the Supreme Court of Washington said:

“There is still another class of cases which hold what seems to us to be the correct doc-' trine, viz. that the obligation, whether for misfeasance or nonfeasance, does not rest in contract at all, but is a common-law obligation devolving upon every responsible person to so use that which he controls as not to injure another, whether he is in the operation of his own property as principal or in the operation of the property of another as agent.” Lough v. John Davis & Co., 30 Wash. 213, 70 Pac. 491, 59 L. R. A. 802, 94 Am. St. Rep. 848.

The Supreme Court of Ohio, in stating the rule of nonliability of agents for nonfeasance, which was quoted with approval in Judge Stayton’s opinion in Labadie v. Hawley, 61 Tex. 179, 48 Am. Rep. 278, was careful to say that it was only “in general” that the rule applied.

An unmanageable horse endangers the safety of those in proximity to him no more certainly than does an elevator out of repair bring danger to those using it. It was claimed that an agent, knowing a horse of his principal to be unmanageable, could not be made to respond in damages to a pedestrian, run over by the horse while driven along a street by the agent in the conduct of the principal’s business. In rejecting the claim, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts said:

“One who actively participates in a negligent use of property, with full knowledge of the danger to third persons, is himself negligent, and he cannot avoid liability by showing that he was assisting the negligent owner as his servant or agent.” Corliss v. Keown, 207 Mass. 151, 93 N. E. 144.

The general principle underlying our decision is laid down in volume 1, Street’s Foundations of Legal Liability, p. 92, as follows:

“In every situation where a man undertakes to act or to pursue a particular course, he is under an implied legal obligation or duty to act with reasonable care, to the end that the person or property of others may not be injured by any force which he sets in operation or by any agent for which he is responsible. If he fails to exercise the degree of caution which the law requires in a particular situation, he is hold liable for any damage that results to another just as if he had bound himself by an obligatory promise to exercise the required degree of care.”

See, also, Continental Fruit Express v. Leas, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 584, 110 S. W. 132.

The trial court disregarded the mandatory provisions of articles 1971, 1984a, and 1985, Vernon’s iSayles’ Texas Civil Statutes, in the charges given and refused, in submitting the issues of contributory negligence raised by the pleadings of defendant in error. For that reason, no other proper judgment could have been rendered by the Court of Civil Appeals than to reverse the judgment of the trial court and to remand the case for a new trial.-

The statutes make it the duty of the court in trials by jury: First, to submit all the controverted fact issues made by the pleadings; second, to submit each issue distinctly and separately, avoiding all intermingling; and, third, to give such explanation and definition of legal- terms as shall be necessary to enable the jury to answer each issue.

Bach group of facts pleaded by defendant in error, which, standing alone, would, if proven, constitute a complete defense to plaintiff in error’s suit, presented an issue. It was the statutory right' of defendant in error to have the issue presented by each complete plea submitted separately to the jury, just as plaintiff in error had the right to have submitted each issue, entitling her to recover, which she pleaded and proved. The court submitted separately, as the statute required, each group of facts relied on by plaintiff in error, under her pleadings and the evidence, to constitute negligence on the part of defendant in error. The court, over the objection of defendant in error, refused to submit separately each group of facts relied on by defendant in error, under its pleadings and the evidence, to constitute contributory negligence on the part of Alexander Fox.

In submitting either negligence or contributory negligence, special issues should be restricted to specific acts of negligence alleged and proven. It was no less improper to submit the general question of Fox’s contributory negligence, over objection, without regard to the specific acts of negligence pleaded and supported by proof, than it would have been to have submitted the general question of defendant in error’s negligence, without regard to the specific acts of negligence set out in plaintiff in error’s petition.

So stringent was the old rule that no special verdict was allowed to stand which did not dispose of all issues of fact. Cole v. Crawford, 69 Tex. 126, 5 S. W. 646. No change has been made in the right of a party plaintiff or defendant to have all fact issues submitted and determined. The change is that the party who fails to make written request for the submission of an issue is treated as consenting for the court to determine the issue. Moore v. Pierson, 100 Tex. 116, 117, 94 S. W. 1132.

After erring by intermingling in one question all the contributory negligence issues by asking whether Fox was “guilty of contributory negligence in his conduct in, around, or about the elevator, or the shaft thereof, prior to or at the time he was injured,” the court further erred in refusing certain special charges asked by defendant in error which might have rendered the first error harmless. Each of these charges directed the jury to answer the general question against plaintiff in error if the evidence established a specified group of facts constituting a defense to 'plaintiff in error’s suit, under the law of contributory negligence. These charges .contained explanations which were necessary to enable the jury to properly answer the court’s comprehensive question, and hence were required by the express terms of the statute.

Defendant in error not only objected to the single question submitted, covering all contributory negligence issues, but requested in writing that several contributory negligence issues be separately submitted. The court erroneously refused to submit these issues, as the Court of, Civil Appeals rightly determined.

The right of a party plaintiff or defendant to have all fact issues submitted to, and determined by, a jury which he has pleaded and proven, depends in no wise on whether judgment is to be entered on a special or general verdict. The language of the statute is too plain to admit of doubt on this point. Hence the cases settling the rule where general charges are given settle it where special issues are submitted.

The rule, no matter what the form of the charge, as applied to the plea of contributory negligence, is stated by Judge Denman with clearness and precision in M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. McGlamory, 89 Tex. 638, 35 S. W. 1059, as follows:

“Defendants had the right to prepare and demand the giving of a charge requiring the jury to find whether the evidence established the existence of any specified group of facts which if true would in law establish such plea. * * * This rule does not permit a litigant to annoy the court or confuse the jury by special charges upon the weight of, or giving prominence to, each circumstance introduced tending to support his cause of action or defense, but requires him at his peril to present in such special charge for the consideration of the jury a fact or group of facts, which, if found by them from the evidence to be true, establishes in law some material issue presented by the pleading.”

The rule is reaffirmed in St. L. & S. W. Ry. Co. v. Casseday, 92 Tex. 528, 50 S. W. 125; G., C. & G. F. Ry. Co. v. Maugham, 95 Tex. 417, 67 S. W. 765; St. L. S. W. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Hall, 98 Tex. 481, 85 S. W. 786; Traction Co. v. Adams, 107 Tex. 614, 183 S. W. 155; Ft. W. & D. C. Ry. Co. v. Morrow (Tex. Civ. App.) 235 S. W. 667; and Ft. W. & D. C. Ry. Co. v. Hawley (Tex. Civ. App.) 235 S. W. 663.

We do not mean to say that all the special charges requested by .defendant in error on contributory negligence should have been given. We do hold that reversible error was committed in refusing charges entitled to be given under the stated rules, which should control another trial.

Defendant in error will be entitled, on another trial, to have the jury determine whether its negligence, if any, was the proximate cause of Fox’s injury.

The evidence as to Busch’s ownership of stock of defendant in error was not immaterial, and no error was committed by the district court in its admission.

The assignments of defendant in error in the Cburt of Civil Appeals not herein mentioned were correctly determined by that court.

Since the Court o.f Civil Appeals entered the judgment which should have been rendered, it is ordered that its judgment reversing the judgment of the district court and remanding the cause for a new trial be affirmed, but the district court will be governed by this opinion on the new trial. 
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