Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Mitchum

194 S.W. 622, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 396
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1917
DocketNo. 8544.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 622 (Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Mitchum) 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
Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Mitchum, 194 S.W. 622, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 396 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

J. H. Mitchum instituted this suit against the Chicago, Rock Island & Gulf Railway Company to recover damages for alleged personal injuries sustained by him while employed as a section hand by the defendant company, and from a judgment in his favor for $12,500, the railway company has appealed.

According to allegations in the plaintiff’s amended petition, on January 20, 1907, he, together with two other section hands were working on defendant’s track about two miles south of Park Springs under the control and direction of Charles Wicker, defendant’s section foreman. A hand car was in use by the section gang. As it approached a curve in the track to the south, the foreman went forward for the purpose of discovering whqther or not a train was approaching from that direction, to the end that the hand car might be removed from the track if such was found to be true. He directed plaintiff and the other section hands to remain with the hand car and to follow him whenever he signaled them- so to do. While plaintiff and his fellow servants were moving the car southward, in obedience to instructions from the foreman, a passenger train suddenly approached from the north with great speed, and while plaintiff and the other section hands were attempting to remove the hand car from the track in order to avoid a wreck of the passenger train, and on account of the great haste necessary so to do, plaintiff slipped and fell, and his side struck with great force on one of the rails of the track, which resulted in serious injuries, for which damages were sought.

Plaintiff further alleged that as said train approached from the north he was facing south, and he did not discover its approach until the train was in close proximity to him; that the foreman was guilty of negligence in failing to warn him of the approach of the train; that the agents and employ és of the defendant in charge of the train discovered the presence of the hand car and the plaintiff and his fellow servants, and their perilous position, in time to have stopped the train or checked its speed so as to enable such employes to remove the hand car from the track with safety, but after making such discovery they negligently failed to check the train, and thereby to obviate and lessen the danger *624 to plaintiff, and further that, if the persons in charge of the train failed to discover said section hands upon the track in time to so stop or check said train, then they were negligent in failing to make such discovery, which they could have done if they had kept a reasonable lookout for obstructions on the track.

Liability of the defendant was predicated upon the negligence so alleged, and those issues of negligence so presented were submitted in the court’s charge to the jury as a basis for a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, except the issue of discovered peril.

This is the second appeal in the present suit. On the former appeal a judgment in plaintiff’s favor was reversed by the Court of-Civil Appeals at Texarkana, and judgment then rendered in favor of the railway company; that court holding that the evidence showed conclusively as a matter of law that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence precluding a recovery. See C., R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Mitchum, 140 S. W. 812. But our Supreme Court held that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in rendering the judgment and remanded the cause to the trial court for another trial. See Mitchum v. C., R. I. & G. Ry. Co. (Sup.) 173 S. W. 878.

Whether or not plaintiff sustained any injury’ at all in the manner he alleged he was injured was strongly controverted in the proof introduced. Assuming that he was injured as alleged, another strongly controverted issue was the distance the train was from plaintiff at the time he first discovered its approach and attempted to remove the hand ear from the track.

On August 31, 1907, plaintiff gave a statement in writing detailing how he claimed the accident happened. In that statement he said that the accident occurred February 11, 1907; that Frank M. Abies, another section hand, the foreman, Charles Wicker, and himself were the only men engaged in work at the time; that he discovered the train approaching in his rear when it was 500 or 000 yards away; that in removing the car from the track his feet slipped on the ice which covered the ties and caused him. to fall, his side striking upon the rail. On the same date he gave another written statement, in which he again said that the cause of his fall was slipping upon the ice, and under the heading “Names and-Addresses of Witnesses” he gave only the name of F. M. Abies. On the trial from which the appeal is taken he testified that he .could not give the exact date of the accident, but that it occurred between the 20th and last of January, 1907, that his brother, Will Mitchum, and Fuller Abies were all working as section hands at the time with Charles Wicker as their foreman, and that when he first discovered the approach of the train it was 50 or 75 yards distant. Fuller Abies and Charles Wicker were both introduced as witnesses, and both testified that in January and February, 1907, they worked on the section with the plaintiff, but that plaintiff did not fall on the track as claimed by him, and that they never heard of any such claim being made by him until long after that time, and after plaintiff had ceased to work. The evidence further shows that plaintiff’s brother, Will Mitchum, ceased to work on such section the latter part of January, 1907; the foreman fixing January 19th as the specific date Will Mitchum ceased to work.

[1] Error has been assigned to the refusal by the court of the following special instruction requested by defendant;

“Gentlemen of the jury, if you believe that the plaintiff fell and was injured while attempting to remove a hand car from the track in front of an approaching train, and if you find that plaintiff and those with him on said hand car discovered said train approaching when it was at a distance from them of 500 or 600 yards, or something like that distance, and that at such distance plaintiff and those with him had ample time in which to remove said hand car from the track before the train reached said point, then you are instructed that defendant cannot be held liable for any failure on the part of any one to give them warning or notice of the approach of said train.”

The court gave instructions upon the issues of assumed risk and contributory negligence of the plaintiff, but gave no instructions presenting the converse of plaintiff’s contentions of defendant’s negligence in the three respects alleged, further than the charge in general terms that, in order for plaintiff to recover, the burden was upon him to establish by a preponderance of the evidence the facts which would entitle him to a verdict under the instructions given, and the further instruction reading as follows:

“If you believe that plaintiff’s injuries, if any he received, were caused by an accident and were not the result proximately of negligence on the part of the defendant, as charged by plaintiff, and explained in other instructions given you, then you will find for the defendant.”

The contention presented in plaintiff’s pleadings was that he would not have slipped and fallen but for his haste to remove the hand car from the track, which haste was made necessary by reason of the close proximity of the approaching train when he first discovered it.

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Related

Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Mitchum
214 S.W. 699 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1919)
Kansas City, M. O. Ry. v. Swift
204 S.W. 135 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 622, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-g-ry-co-v-mitchum-texapp-1917.