El Paso Electric Ry. Co. v. Allen

208 S.W. 739, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1919
DocketNo. 905.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 739 (El Paso Electric Ry. Co. v. Allen) 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
El Paso Electric Ry. Co. v. Allen, 208 S.W. 739, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 154 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

On May 29, 1917, while attempting to cross the street car tracks on Boulevard street, between Dallas and Williams streets, in the city of El Paso, Ruth Allen, appellee, a girl 10 years and 5 months old, a normal child mentally and physically, was struck by one of appellant’s street cars, knocked down, her right leg crushed, necessitating amputation at the knee. For the injury received she brings this suit.

Boulevard street, upon which the street car double tracks are situated, runs east and west, while Dallas and Williams streets run north and south, Dallas being west of Williams. The street cars go west on the north track and east on the south track. Ruth Allen lived on Dallas street south of Boulevard. Between 4 and 5 o’clock in the after- ' noon on the date of the accident, Ruth was sent by her mother on an errand to a house on the north side of Boulevard street, and situated on Boulevard about midway between Dallas and Williams streets.

Just before the accident while on her way home, and while on the north side of Boulevard street, Ruth started to cross Boulevard street in the direction of her home, from a point on the north side of Boulevard about 100 feet east of the intersection of Dallas and Boulevard streets, but, seeing a street car approaching from the east on the north track (some witnesses said two cars were approaching from the east) she stepped back to the curb and waited for the car, or cars, from the east to pass. As soon as the car or cars going west had passed, she again started walking, from the same point, to cross the street to the said south side, passing behind the last west going car (if there were two) and was struck by an east-bound street car just as she got upon the south track.

The case was submitted upon special issues, the negligent acts charged being: (1) Negligence in operating, the street car at a dangerously high rate of speed; (2) negligence in failing to give due signal of the approach of the street car; (3) negligence in failing to use due care to discover and avoid injury to persons using the street. The appellant pleaded general denial, and plea of contributory negligence of Ruth Allen in attempting to cross the street near the middle of the block, and passing behind one street car immediately in front of another. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $15,000, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

The court in its charge gave proper definitions of negligence and ordinary care, and instructed the jury that:

“It is the duty of a street railway company, such as defendant, in the operation of its cars along its track on the streets of a city, to use ordinary care to discover and to avoid injuring persons who are crossing such streets, and a failure of defendant’s servants, agents, or em-ployés operating its cars to use such ordinary care is negligence on the part of a street railway company.”

, The court, after instructing the jury as to the duty of a pedestrian in crossing a street along which a street railway operates its cars, submitted to the jury, among others, the following questions, to which the jury made the following answers:

Q. 1. “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that defendant’s motorman was negligent on the occasion in question in operating the street car at the speed he was operating it as he approached the place where such car struck plaintiff, Ruth Allen?” Answer: "Xes.”
Q. 3. “Do you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that defendant’s employés operating the street car on the occasion in question *741 failed to use ordinary care to discover and avoid injuring Ruth Allen?” Answer: “Yes.”
Q. 5. “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that defendant’s employes failed to give due signal and warning of the approach of the street ear at the place of the collision on the occasion in question?” Answer: “Yes.”
Q. 6. “If you have answered, ‘Yes,’ to question No. 5, then.answer 6: Do you believe from a. preponderance of the evidence that such failure was negligence on the part of defendant’s said employes, if they or either of them did so fail?” Answer: “Yes.”

The court further charged as follows (to which we will refer as part of and embracing question S):

“In questions No. 1, No. 3, and No. 6, are submitted to you certain alleged grounds of negligence. If you should have answered two or more of said enumerated questions in the affirmative, then and in that event answer this additional question: Question No. 8: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that a combination of two or more of the said negligent acts of which you have found the defendant guilty, if you have found the defendant guilty of any negligent act or acts, was the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff, or a proximate cause thereof?” Answer: “Yes.”

In question 9 the court submitted to the jury the issue of negligence of Ruth Allen in undertaking to cross the street at the place she did, from behind the west-going car as she did, and on the issues the jury found against appellant.

Appellant presents 11 assignments of error. The first assignment claims error in the court’s refusal to give a submitted peremptory charge to find for appellant. It is the insistence of appellant under this assignment that the undisputed evidence shows that Ruth Allen undertook to cross the street and street car tracks near the center of the block instead of at a street intersection and regular crossing, passing behind a street car going west and immediately in front of the street car going east, which struck her. That her acts in so doing were negligent acts per se, and necessarily constitute the proximate cause of her injury. We need not state the evidence at length. It shows that Ruth Allen, after performing her errand on the north side of Boulevard street, started to return to her home on south side. She did not go to the intersection of Boulevard and Dallas streets, but undertook to cross at a point some 100 feet east of the intersection of those streets. She stepped off the sidewalk and saw a car coming from the east and stepped back. Another car had just preceded that one. That car had gone on west. The car approaching slowed down as if to .let her on. but on her signal that she did not wish to take the car it went on slowly. She said:

“I looked for cars in the other direction. When that car passed I looked both ways, and I started again, and could not see any car coming. I went on across in behind the car I had let pass. I looked for cars in either direction. I was walking. I started straight across the track, and the car knocked me down. The car was going east. I did not hear that car or any gong or whistle on it. There was no alarm given there that the car was coming. I did not know the car was coming'. The first I knew of it I heard the roaring of the wheels. I was so close to it then I could not get out of the way. If I had seen or heard that car coming I would not have g'one on the track. I would have stayed on the curb until it passed. I suppose it was the front end of the car that struck me.”

Witness Langston testified to seeing Ruth standing on the curb to let a car pass going west. He said:

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 739, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-electric-ry-co-v-allen-texapp-1919.