Beaumont, Sour Lake & Western Railroad v. Olmstead

120 S.W. 596, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 96, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 441
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 596 (Beaumont, Sour Lake & Western Railroad v. Olmstead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaumont, Sour Lake & Western Railroad v. Olmstead, 120 S.W. 596, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 96, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 441 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

McMEANS, Associate Justice.

This was an action by appellee, G. P. Olmstead, against the appellant Beaumont, Sour Lake & Western Railroad Company, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while he was engaged in the service of appellant as conductor on a work train, by breaking in two of its bridge across San Jacinto river over which the train was running, so that he and the cars were precipitated below and he caused to sustain serious and permanent injuries; the gravamen of the complaint being that appellant had failed to use ordinary care for. his safety, in that the bridge had been made dangerous and not reasonably safe by one or more of its supports having been undermined and rendered insecure, of which the defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care on its part would have known, in time to have warned plaintiff and averted injury to him, but that it had negligently failed to do so, and had negligently permitted the bridge to be and remain in such unsafe condition and the train to pass over it in that condition, thereby proximately causing the injuries complained of. The answer of appellant, so far as relied on, consisted of a general denial, with pleas of assumed risk and contributory negligence. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for $20,000, to review which the railroad company has appealed.

The evidence adduced warrants the following findings of fact: On July 15, 1907, appellee was in the employment of the appellant in the capacity-of conductor on one of its freight trains, engaged in hauling sand for surfacing. The train upon which he was working was not a construction but a surfacing train. The sand was hauled from a pit into which a spur track ran about 1,500 feet east of the San Jacinto river, where a steam shovel was used for loading cars. When the cars were loaded with sand the engine, which was headed east, would push them westward over the bridge, cross the San Jacinto river and swap them for empty cars, returning with the empties, and the loaded cars would be taken by another engine to the point on the track where the sand was needed, and then in due course would be similarly returned as empties. This was the method of the work. Appellee did not always, but did occasionally, go on these trips with the train; he had not gone over' the bridge for four or five days prior to the casualty. On the afternoon of July 15, 1907, at about 3 o’clock, the engine at the pit swapped loaded for empty cars, and by shortly after 5 o’clock a train of eleven loaded cars was ready to be swapped for empties, but the engine with the empties not being in sight, and it being *99 necessary before 6 o’clock to fill the engine tank with water for use by the steam shovel during the night, appellee caused the engineer to back the train to the water tank alongside the bridge about 800 feet westward from the east margin of the San Jacinto river. The trestle of the bridge was about 3,000 feet long. The bridge was about 45 or 55 feet high, and the track for two miles was straight. Just about the time the engine reached the water tank appellee, who was on the most westward car, the one farthest from the engine, heard a noise of the giving away of the bridge, and in the moment that elapsed before the bridge gave way he decided that it would be safer for him to remain on the car than to attempt to leave it from the height he was. The bridge broke in two and part of it went down, leaving a gap in it sufficiently wide, being from 50 to 200 feet wide, to precipitate below the five westward or rear cars, including the one upon which appellee was. Appellee was thrown below, striking the ground or other hard object, thereby sustaining the injuries of which he complains, which will be further referred to in discussing the assignment of error which challenges the verdict as excessive. The breaking in two and giving away of the bridge was caused by a gang of men who were engaged at appellant’s work in excavating below for new creosote piers, digging so as to undermine the old .piers without properly supporting them, whereby the cap was caused to work off the stringers of the bridge and it to fall when the train came upon it. The bridge was in part to be replaced by the new creosote piers, but it had been in use for about two years, and the road was about to be opened up with it to passenger traffic. Similar trains, heavily loaded with sand in the customary manner, as that in question, had been passing over the bridge every four or five hours during the day. Such a one had passed thereover about an hour and a half before the bridge gave way. One Forbes was appellant’s general superintendent, and one Innis" ranked under him as its agent, arid one Kountz was the appellant’s division engineer, and Kountz was under or near the bridge at the time of the casuahy. He was in charge of the bridges and surfacing. Ho notice or warning was given appellee by the persons doing the work of excavating or by any one else of any impending danger, and there is practically no evidence that appellee had knowledge of the defect and danger. He knew the excavation was going on as it had been for the two weeks next passed, and he had seen a great many similar excavations. He testified: “There was nothing about that excavation and the way those piles were put in the holes, and so on, before this accident happened, that attracted my attention to any danger; never examined it very closely; my business was fifty-five feet above it; . . . had never had any experience in making brick buildings and excavations like that; it is not in my line.” There was no evidence that plaintiff did or omitted to do anything in which he was negligent. Appellant offered no evidence on the issue of its liability, confining its testimony to the amount of damages.

Appellant, by its first and second assignments of error, complains that the verdict is excessive in that the amount awarded appellee would compensate Mm for an entire loss of his earning capacity for the remainder of his life if he had been perfectly sound prior to his inju *100 ries, whereas the evidence shows that prior to his injuries appellee was not a sound and healthy man, but had certain defects and disabilities which rendered him unable to perform train service and unfit to endure strong- physical exertion, and that prior to the casualty he had organic trouble with his heart which disqualified him for train service, and that he had tuberculosis in his family, and that appellee is not wholly disabled from performing work of any kind, but only from performing such ordinary manual labor as an able-bodied man could.

Briefly, the facts relative to appellee’s injuries are these: At the tune appellee was injured he was thirty-nine years of age, and, though of slight build, was in perfectly good health—had not paid $30 for physician’s services in his life; had experienced no trouble whatever with his lungs and heart; had been railroading, serving as brakeman and conductor, with slight intervals, continuously for twenty years before the trial; the average salary of a conductor is from $135 to $150 per month; he was earning $100 per month in that capacity when injured; he was temperate and of good habits of life, usually employed, and could average with the best in that regard. When he was thrown to the ground from the bridge he was rendered unconscious, came to for a few moments as he lay on the bank of the river, then lapsed into unconsciousness, remaining in that condition until he awoke about four o’clock the next morning in the hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W. 596, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 96, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaumont-sour-lake-western-railroad-v-olmstead-texapp-1909.