Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Armes

74 S.W. 77, 32 Tex. Civ. App. 32, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 28, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 S.W. 77 (Chicago, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Armes) 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, Rock Island & Texas Railway Co. v. Armes, 74 S.W. 77, 32 Tex. Civ. App. 32, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 169 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

—This is an appeal, from a judgment in appellee’s favor for the sum of $6000 as damages for personal injuries received by appellee’s wife in alighting from one of appellant’s passenger trains. Appellee alleged that his wife purchased a ticket and became a passenger on said train from Fort Worth, Texas, to Paradise, in Wise County; that upon arrival at Paradise Mrs. Armes, with a child and a grip, attempted to disembark, and that as she was on the last step of the passenger coach upon which she had been riding and in the act of alighting, appellant’s agents, without warning, suddenly and negligently started the train with a jerk, thereby causing appellee’s wife to fall upon the station platform and on and across her grip, whereby the serious *34 and permanent injuries described in appellee’s petition were inflicted. Negligence was alleged in failing to stop the train at the station named a reasonable time to enable appellee’s wife to get off with safety, and in the failure of appellant’s operatives to assist her to safely alight.

The defendant denied that it started the train suddenly, and averred that it stopped its train a reasonable and the usual length of time at Paradise; and that plaintiff’s wife was guilty of negligence in failing to leave the train within a reasonable time after same had stopped for the purpose of allowing passengers to alight, and was further guilty of negligence in attempting to get off the train while it was in motion, and also in taking a long drive on the day of the accident in an ordinary farm wagon, and in visiting about the neighborhood for three or four weeks in a rough ordinary farm wagon, and in failing to procure any medical aid or treatment until several months after the alleged accident. The evidence upon these issues tended to different conclusions, but the jury returned a verdict for appellee, assessing damages in the amount of the judgment.

We are confronted with some twenty assignments of error, which are elaborately briefed, and we deem it impracticable as well, perhaps, as also unnecessary, to discuss them all at length. We will, therefore, endeavor to make such brief disposition of them as we can within reasonable bounds, stating the pertinent facts in connection with the assignments as disposed of.

The assignments urged in oral argument upon the submission of this cause are the third, fourth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth and sixteenth, and to those we will first address ourselves, as presumably the most important.

The seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth assignments are grouped, and all relate to the action of the court in refusing special charges. The seventh assignment relates to appellant’s first special charge, which is to the effect that if the jury should find that appellant’s train stopped at Paradise a reasonable and sufficient length of time for appellee’s wife to have walked off before it started, if she acted with such diligence and promptness as a person of ordinary prudence would have acted under the same circumstances, that they should find for the defendant. The second special charge to which the eighth assignment relates is to the effect that if the jury should find that appellee’s-wife got off the train while it was in motion and was thereby injured, and that a person of ordinary care and prudence, situated as she was would not have made the effort to get off of the defendant’s train at the time and in the manner and under the circumstances that she did, that the verdict should be for the defendant.

The -third special charge to which the ninth assignment relates is to the effect that if the jury should find that appellee’s wife at the time she attempted to disembark from defendant’s train at Paradise was incumbered with and carrying a large and heavy grip, and that by reason thereof she fell and sustained injuries which she otherwise would not have sustained, and that a person of ordinary care and prudence would not have *35 carried such a grip and attempted to get off the train at the time and under the circumstances she did, the jury should find for the defendant.

The fifth special charge, to which the tenth assignment relates, is to the effect that if appellee’s wife was warned by a bystander not to get off the train while it was in motion, but that notwithstanding such warning she did so, while incumbered with a heavy grip and while the train was in motion, and that a person of ordinary care and prudence would not have made the effort with the information then possessed by appellee’s wife and otherwise surrounded as she was at that time, to find for the defendant. Under these assignments there is but a single proposition, which is as follows: “These charges should have been given, as they constituted an affirmative presentation of the defendant’s defense, and applied the law to the specific facts of the case, and were correct presentations of the law.”

The court after giving proper definitions of negligence among other things charged the jury as follows:

“4. Whether or no.t the failure of the parties in charge of said train to assist plaintiff’s wife to get off said train, constituted negligence, is a question of fact to be determined by you under the circumstances, taking into consideration the failure on her part to ask for such assistance.
“5. If you find from the evidence that when the train on which plaintiff’s wife was riding reached Paradise she used reasonable diligence, situated and circumstanced as she was, to get off said train, and it said train did not stop at Paradise long enough for her to have alighted therefrom in safety, and if while she was endeavoring to get off said train, it was started, and if, by reason thereof, or if by reason of the negligence of the parties operating said train in failing to assist her to get off^-if you find that such failure was negligence—she was caused to fall and be injured without fault or negligence on her part, then you will find for plaintiff.
“6. Unless you find from the evidence that plaintiff’s wife was injured by falling while attempting to alight from said train, and that such fall was caused by the negligence of the defendant’s employes in charge of said train, you will find for the defendant. If her injury, if she is injured, was produced by any other cause than by falling while attempting to get off said train, you will find for defendant.
“7. If you find that said train did not stop long enough at Paradise to enable plaintiff’s wife, in her condition and circumstances, to get off in safety, and if when she was trying to get off, the train started, and if while it was moving she undertook to get off and was injured, and if in so trying to get off a moving train she was herself guilty of a want of ordinary care as defined to yon hereinafter, then you will find for the defendant.
“8. If said train stopped long enough for plaintiff’s wife to have gotten off safely, circumstanced and conditioned as she was, and if she *36 failed to use reasonable diligence to get off, and unnecessarily and negligently remained upon the train until it started and then undertook to get off, and in attempting to get off fell and was injured, you will find for defendant.
“9.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W. 77, 32 Tex. Civ. App. 32, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-texas-railway-co-v-armes-texapp-1903.