Bragg v. Houston Electric Co.

264 S.W. 245, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 614
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1924
DocketNo. 1126.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 245 (Bragg v. Houston Electric Co.) 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
Bragg v. Houston Electric Co., 264 S.W. 245, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 614 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

* Writ of error granted December 10, 1924. *Page 246 This suit was instituted by appellant against appellee to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by her while a passenger on one of appellee's street cars in the city of Houston, Harris county, Tex. Upon a trial to a jury a verdict was instructed against appellant, and judgment entered thereon.

Appellant alleged that as she was attempting, to leave the car she stumbled over a large suitcase which had been placed in the aisle by one of the passengers, causing her to fall violently to the floor and to sustain serious and permanent injuries. She predicated her cause of action on the following grounds of negligence:

"XI. Plaintiff would further represent that each and all of her hereinbefore mentioned injuries, and each and all of the hereinbefore mentioned items of damages were and are the direct and proximate result of the negligence of the defendant company, its agents, servants and employés, in the following particulars, to wit: (a) In furnishing and operating over its line of street railway in the city of Houston, the above-described one-man car. (b) In furnishing and operating said car upon which the plaintiff was then and there a passenger, without a conductor or person charged with the duty of keeping the aisle of said car clear and free of suitcases and other like articles for the safety of its passengers. (c) In permitting a passenger to carry into said car the suitcase mentioned above, and to deposit the same in the aisle of said car where plaintiff and other passengers had to pass. (d) In not requiring said passenger to deposit and leave said suitcase on the front end of said car, which she could have done with perfect safety to plaintiff and other passengers thereon. (e) In failing to keep a lookout to prevent the passengers from taking into and depositing in said aisle the suitcase over which plaintiff fell."

The following exceptions, urged by appellee, were sustained by the trial court:

"Defendant further specially excepts and demurs to subdivision "a" of paragraph 11, for the reason that the defendant is under no legal duty to operate a two-man car, and for the further reason that the operation or furnishing of the one-man car could not be a violation of any legal duty owing by the defendant to the plaintiff, and, therefore, could not be a ground of negligence for which defendant will be liable in damages to the plaintiff. * * * Defendant specially excepts and demurs to *Page 247 subdivision "b" of said paragraph 11, for the reason that the defendant is not under any legal duty or requirement to operate a street car with a conductor and that the allegation of said subdivision "b" does not charge the defendant with the violation of any legal duty, and for the further reason that the defendant is not under any legal duty to furnish and operate a street car with more than one man, provided such method of operation be the usual, customary and standard method of operation by ordinary, careful, and prudent street car companies."

As to the circumstances attending appellant's injuries, she testified as follows:

"The street car that I boarded to come to town that morning was a one-man street car; it was a small car — You get on the front and there is only one man running it, there is no conductor on the car, just the one man, I judge he is known as the motorman. * * * The one man that was on the car occupied a position at the front end of the car, at the wheel. * * * I expected to get on the car and pay my fare; I did that; I dropped the fare in that little receptacle there — I mean the motorman, he was right by this place but I could not say how far. * * * I have testified that there was but one place of entrance and one place of exit on this car. This place of entrance and exit is at the front end of the car and the man operating the car occupies a position at the end of the car. The entrance and the exit, and the only ones on the car, are at the front where the man operating the car stands. * * * The car stopped at Polk and Caroline for us to board it; after boarding it we procured a seat and the car started to town, and my daughter and myself rode the same, and especially myself, until we reached Main and Texas. In going out of the car when ready to alight, we came out the same way we entered, there was no other way for us to get out of the car and alight from the car. * * * It was a small car, I know that; the aisle was very narrow. * * * When my daughter and myself got on the car, after paying our fare, we went to a seat and sat down; I don't think we went quite to the middle of the car, but somewhere near the middle I think it was, a little more to the front. * * * I cannot say exactly how the car was loaded when we got on it; I don't remember, but there were people on it; it was loaded before we got to town. When we got to town and before we got off the car was crowded; I mean by it being crowded that there were people standing in the aisle; they were standing because there was not enough seats. * * * There were several stops made, but I could not say how many. I do not recall how many streets there are from Texas to Polk, where I boarded the car, but I think there are about six or seven, and I think there were six or seven stops made. * * * I think the car I boarded stopped one or more times and took on passengers; I know it took on a load of passengers, and it stopped several times, but I do not know how many. * * * When I started to alight from the street car I fell; there was a suitcase in the aisle and I had some Christmas packages, and had them up in my arms because in getting out they would take up so much room, and I don't know where the suitcase got on, but it was in front of me; the first I saw the suitcase was when I fell over it. * * * I did not see anything, a suitcase or other obstruction, in the passageway when I entered the car from the front after paying my fare. * * * If the suitcase had not been there — the passengers, most of them got off the car at Main and Texas — I would have had no trouble in getting out, if it had not been for the suitcase. * * * I don't think I had gone but a few steps from my seat when I fell. * * * I know I fell over a grip because when they picked me up there was the grip. * * * And the motorman came after the people got up, and picked it up and asked whose it was, and there was a lady sitting there, and she said it was hers. * * * It was a great big grip, the best I remember the biggest I ever saw. When I say grip, I mean a suitcase, a high, square suitcase. * * * I don't know, but it must have been kind of this way (indicating). I mean not sitting straight across, I think it was too large to go straight across, because when I got off it was lying that way (indicating). I don't know how to express it, but it was too long to sit straight across, and one end was against the end of the seat. It didn't go straight over, it hung on the seat and I fell on the seats in the street car on this left side. * * * I was on the floor and they picked me up, picked up my packages, and the motorman picked the suitcase up, and they helped me off the car and over to the sidewalk, and the motorman asked me if I was hurt and I said yes, I was hurt, right then. * * * As to how far apart the seats in that street car were, when you go in and sit down, your knees just about touch the other seats; there is not room for a suitcase in there; the seat in front of me would be almost against your knees; those seats in the car are in rows, but there is an iron, or something like that, that I suppose was to push them back and forth.

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264 S.W. 245, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bragg-v-houston-electric-co-texapp-1924.