Dallas Consolidated Traction Railway Co. v. Hurley

31 S.W. 73, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 246, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1895
DocketNo. 118.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 73 (Dallas Consolidated Traction Railway Co. v. Hurley) 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
Dallas Consolidated Traction Railway Co. v. Hurley, 31 S.W. 73, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 246, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 60 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit for damages brought by Annie Hurley and her two minor children against the Dallas Consolidated Traction Bail way Company (a street railway company), and Sam P. Cochran, receiver of said railway company, for damages for the negligent killing of Mike Hurley, who was the husband of the said Annie Hurley, and the father of the other two plaintiffs.

The petition charged, that the said Mike Hurley received the injuries causing his death while he was crossing the track of said railway in the city of Dallas, on a dark night. The negligence of the railway company was charged to consist in rapid driving, absence of any light on the car, and failure to keep watch by the driver, all contrary to the ordinances of the city of Dallas.

The alleged injury was charged to have occurred on August 29,1892, about the hour of 9:30 p. m. Plaintiff’s petition charges, that after said Mike received the injuries causing his death, to wit, on October 15,1892, at the instance of the trustees of a second mortgage executed by said railway company, its property of every description was placed in the hands of said Cochran, as receiver, and that said receivership is still pending in the District Court of the Forty-fourth Judicial District of Dallas County, Texas. (This suit was prosecuted in the Fourteenth Judicial District, Dallas County, Texas.)

The petition charged, that the plaintiffs have by law a lien on the net earnings of the road in the hands of the receiver, superior to that of the mortgagees, and that a large amount of net earnings have come into the hands of the receiver, and have been expended by him for betterments and otherwise, to wit, the sum of $15,000; wherefore said receiver is made a party defendant. '

Plaintiffs prayed for $20,000 actual damages and $5000 exemplary damages, and for a judgment against the receiver on account of the receipt of earnings, and their misappropriation, etc. The defendants pleaded general denial and contributory negligence of the deceased.

There was a general verdict for plaintiffs for $9000, apportioned equally between them, upon which judgment was rendered against both the railway company and the receiver, with directions that the judgment as to the receiver be certified to the District Court of the Forty-fourth Judicial District, and that the receiver be required to pay this judgment in the due course of law out of the earnings of the de *248 fendant company while in the hands of the receiver, and as required to be paid by statute, and in case he fails to pay this judgment within a reasonable time, that the fact of his failure be certified to the trial court, etc.

Both the railway company and the receiver perfected an appeal to this court, and assigned errors, of which they now insist upon the following. (The above statement Of the case is furnished by appellant’s brief, and is substantially correct.)

First assignment of error: “The court erred in overruling defendants’ motion for a new trial, because the verdict of the jury was contrary to the law as given in charge by the court, and contrary to the evidence adduced on the trial, in this: that there was no evidence introduced on the trial that showed or tended to show that the deceased, Mike Hurley, would not have been injured at the time and place he was injured, even if the defendant company had been wholly and entirely free from fault, blame, or negligence; and there was no evidence showing or tending to show that deceased received his injuries by reason of the alleged illegal rate of speed of the car, or by the alleged want of signal lights in the car.”

Appellees in their brief gave a condensed statement of the evidence relating to the manner in which the injury was inflicted, which we find to be sustained by the record. It is as follows:

“The right of way of the appellant’s line of railway in the city of Dallas was expressly granted subject to the charter and ordinances regulating street cars and railroads. The ordinances of the city provide, that no street car should be run at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour, that the conductor or driver of each car shall keep a vigilant watch for all vehicles and persons on foot, either on the track or moving towards it, and on the first appearance of danger of such persons or vehicles the car shall be stopped in the shortest space and time possible, and that after sunset the cars shall be provided with signal lights. The point where this accident occurred was on South Harwood street, where there was no sidewalk, and where people usually walked on the car track or crossed from side to side of the street, according to the condition and nature of the ground. The street at that place is straight, but there was a curve at a point two blocks north of the spot and another curve a short distance south, so that the car could not be seen beyond those curves. The car at the time it ran over Hurley had no lights on it, and it was perfectly dark in the street, being about 10 o’clock at night. Foss and Randolph both saw the car immediately after it struck Hurley, and it had no light of any kind in or on it. At the time the car struck Hurley, and before and after it had struck him, it was running at a furious rate of speed; some of the witnesses say the mules seemed to be running away, others that they were going as fast as they could, and others that the car was going twelve or fifteen miles an hour. Hurley himself said that he heard the car, but could not see it, as there was no light on it, and that it ran *249 upon him so quick that he could not get out of the way. The car made such a noise when it ran over the man that it awakened persons in the neighborhood and could be heard several blocks away; but the driver of the car says he did not know of having run over anybody until the next morning, and that he neither saw nor heard of the man being run over by him that night; he drove right on without stopping or lessening his speed; says he could have stopped his car if he had known there was any use to do so, and it is shown that if it had been going at a legal rate of speed he could easily have done so. It was his last run that night, and he was in a hurry to get to the stables, which were in the direction he was going when he ran over and killed this man. He had never driven street cars until within the month past, but was used to driving mule teams on a country road. The appellants pleaded that Hurley was drunk or asleep on the street car track, but there was no evidence to support this plea. All those who saw and examined him after the accident, including the physicians, said he was not drunk nor drinking, and he was shown to have been a sober man by habit. There was some evidence of an unknown drunken man being seen that night out beyond the place where Hurley was killed, but no sort of identification or connection was shown with Hurley and this person, and it was shown that that was a neighborhood (near the City Park) where drunken tramps resorted in summer time.”

We think the evidence authorizes these conclusions:

1. That the conductor or driver of the car was guilty of negligence in driving at an unlawful and unsafe rate of speed; that he was guilty of negligence in not having the car lighted with signal lights, and was also guilty of negligence in not keeping a vigilant watch for persons on the track, as required by the city ordinances.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 73, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 246, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-consolidated-traction-railway-co-v-hurley-texapp-1895.