Citizens Railway Co. v. Robertson

125 S.W. 343, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 566, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 652
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 343 (Citizens Railway Co. v. Robertson) 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
Citizens Railway Co. v. Robertson, 125 S.W. 343, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 566, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 652 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

KEY, Associate Justice.

— This is the third time that this case has been before this court. The other appeals are reported in 91 S. W., 609, and 103 S. W., 443. At the last trial in the court below the plaintiff recovered judgment for $1500, and the defendant has appealed and presents but one question for decision, and that is the proposition that, as matter of law, the undisputed testimony shows that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. At the time of the accident the plaintiff was ten years, five months and ten days old. The last trial occurred more than four years after that time, and we copy from appellant’s brief the testimony relied on to show contributory negligence.

The plaintiff testified as follows: “I remember being injured on the 24th day of June, 1904. Just before I was hurt I had been to Mrs. E. A. Jones’. I left home and went there after a letter. In going to Mrs. Jones’ I crossed 18th Street, and Mrs. Jones lived about two or three blocks this way from 18th Street. I got the letter, and after getting it I was on my way home with it. I recall just before reaching 18th Street. I was wearing a big sailor hat that day. The wind was blowing. There was a soda water stand right on the corner of 18th Street and Columbus. I saw there were five or six boys about there, and there was another boy across the street; the boy across the street was in a buggy holding the horse. As I passed the soda water stand, I saw my brother, Charlie West, Oscar Moore and Mackey Sparks. Fred Bolinger was. in the buggy across the street. Just after I passed the soda water stand I looked at a letter and looked at the address. At that time I was looking down; the wind was blowing and I had to hold my head down to keep my hat on. In crossing 18th Street I reached the track. Before I reached the track I recall walking on a board that was across a little gully. In passing that gully or board I was looking down. The board was on the street. The part of the street the board was on was the sidewalk. The sidewalk crossed 18th Street at that point. That sidewalk was used by people going, by; they usually went over it if they were walking. I walked along the same place going up to Mrs. Jones’.

“After passing the soda water stand and crossing this little place on the board the car ran over my foot. Just as I was going across, I just got over the first rail — and I think I was in the middle of the track, but I was over the first rail, I know — and I was looking at this letter all the time, and, of course, I lifted my feet to go over the *568 rail and the next thing I knew the car struck me. ... I lived about one block from where I was injured. I knew at the time I was injured that the street car track was there. I had lmown that for a number of years. I had in the past watched out for the cars when I went across there, because I was afraid I would be injured if I did not notice for them. I understood that it would be dangerous for me to come against one of the street cars in motion, or to cross the track without looking.- I knew the only way to be entirely safe there in crossing the track was to look and see if the car was coming, and also, I suppose, to listen and see if I could hear it. I realized that. I knew how to keep out of the way of a car if I saw it coming. I had understood that for a good while. I suppose any child knows all that as well as any grown person. I had been taught by my parents about the danger of the street ears ever since I could remember; I had crossed and recrossed this track at that place.

“At the time I entered onto the track the day I got injured there was nothing at all between me and the street car. It was a perfectly straight track there — a perfectly open, clear way. If I had looked I could have seen the car before I entered on the track, if it was coming. I do not know that it was coming; I did not see it; I don’t guess I did look. I was looking at the envelope and 'the wind was blowing, and I was holding my head down. I was looking at the envelope at the time the car struck me, and I did not look up for the car. Although, the wind was blowing, I suppose it would not have prevented me from raising my head and looking. I was holding my hat on; I guess I was afraid that I would lose my hat. Begardless of how hard the wind was blowing, I could have looked if I wished to. I suppose I forgot to look; I don’t know whether I forgot to look or not, but I did not look. I was reading the letter at the time. I could have seen the car if I had looked, clear down to Austin Avenue where it turns there; it is a distance of about two blocks 'that I could have seen it.

“At the time that the accident happened I had just passed by this soda water stand, and I told my brother to come home. I was not reading the letter when I passed there; I started to read it just as I passed. ... I did. not see the car which way it was coming. I did not see the car until it struck me, and I felt it then. I did not find out which way the car was going. I never did know which way the car was going. . . . The car crossed there every ten minutes; it crosses there both ways. ... I saw Fred Bolinger in the buggy across the street. I saw the buggy. I saw the horse that was hitched to the buggy and saw it was in motion, backing. I saw five or six boys there. I saw Charlie West and young Mr. Moore and Mackey Sparks and my brother. That was all the boys I believe I saw. I saw the stand there made out of sacks. I saw the walk toward the track or plank. I saw the street car track. As to my seeing everything but the street car, all these things were not on the same side as the street car, except Fred Bolinger, and he was farther down.

“If I had done as I had done in the past, and looked down the track before I entered upon the track, I don’t know that I would have been struck. I don’t suppose I would. I don’t guess so. I testified in *569 this case in October, 1906, the trial before the last one. I did not testify then that the wind was blowing hard. They did not ask me that. I did not testify at that time that I had on that broad sailor hat, but I did; I can show you the hat at home. I did not testify about it at that time. I was on the track, I guess, at the timé I was struck. I had just crossed over the first rail. I do not know whether I had reached the middle of the track; I know I had crossed over the first rail; that is all I remember. As to my having testified at the other trials that I was right in the middle of the track, if I had crossed over the rail I was bound to have been in the middle, because a step makes you over in the middle; just about in the middle of the track when you go about a step. I say that I was right in the middle of the track — -just about the middle of the track. I noticed the rail when I stepped over it. It was my right foot that was hurt. I never did see the car at all until I was struck. There was nothing in the world to obstruct my view there. I did not pay any attention to it at all. ... I was facing south; that is, towards my home. My left side was to the car and I was in the middle of the track. I was looking at the envelope when the car struck me. ... I did not see the car and I do not know how fast it was running. I just passed by the soda stand. I just passed by and told Irion to come home; I did not stop at all; I just walked on by and told Irion to come on home as I was going. I do not think I even stopped. I had not been reading the letter as I approached the soda stand; I just looked at it as I passed.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 343, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 566, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-railway-co-v-robertson-texapp-1910.