Ft. Worth & D. C. Ry. Co. v. Keeran

149 S.W. 355, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 903
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 355 (Ft. Worth & D. C. Ry. Co. v. Keeran) 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
Ft. Worth & D. C. Ry. Co. v. Keeran, 149 S.W. 355, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 903 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This appeal is from a judgment in appellee’s favor for $2,931 as damages for personal injuries inflicted by one of appellant’s passing engines in the city of Wichita Falls, Tex. Appellee alleged that at the time he was in the employ of appellant as a brakeman, and that about 10:30 p. m. on the night of November 6, 1909, he was called by a messenger or call boy of the railway company to go out upon a freight train soon to leave Wichita Falls; that he repaired to the caboose of the train, and, having occasion to leave the caboose, stepped! therefrom and was suddenly struck down and injured, in the particulars set forth in his petition, by a beam on the rear end of a passing switch engine on a track parallel to that upon which the caboose was situated. He alleged that the company was guilty of negligence in operating its engine in the yards in the city without any sufficient light on the back end thereof, and in that it failed to have any man as a lookout on the end of the engine in the direction the same was traveling, so as to give warning of the approach of the engine; that the servants and employés operating the engine were further *356 negligent, in that the engine at the time was running without the application of steam, making very little noise, and that the operatives failed to either ring the bell or blow the whistle, or in any manner to give notice to the plaintiff or other person of the approach of the engine.

Appellant replied by a general denial and a special plea of contributory negligence in a number of particulars. So far as now material, the particulars are: “(a) That said plaintiff went upon a track upon which he knew that trains would likely run, without looking or listening for the approach of a train, (b) That said plaintiff, in the nighttime, stepped upon the track in the yards of defendant company in the city of Wichita Falls, Texas. That plaintiff went upon the track and in yards of the defendant company at a time he was not required or requested to be there, and several hours before he was due to leave on his train, and was at the place of his alleged accident at a time the defendant neither required nor requested him to be there, (c) That plaintiff violated a rule of the company, in that he went upon the tracks at night at the point where he sustained his injury, if any, without carrying with him a lighted lantern to enable parties operating switch engine to ascertain his presence, (d) That said plaintiff is further guilty of negligence, in that he failed to notify the parties in charge of said switch engine that he was going upon the tracks at the point where he did go upon the tracks, and took no precaution whatever to guard against being injured by a passing train or engine, (e) That plaintiff stepped upon the tracks in front of a moving engine or cars so suddenly, and within such a short distance of the moving cars or engine, that it was impossible for the parties in charge of such engine or cars to ascertain the presence of plaintiff upon the track.”

The trial was before a jury and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum stated in the judgment.

Of the nine assignments of error presented in appellant’s behalf, eight of them go to the action of the court in refusing special instructions requested, and .one (the ninth and last) to the third clause in the court’s charge. In other words, no contention is made that the evidence fails to support the verdict and judgment in appellee’s favor; the whole complaint here going to the manner in which the issues were submitted. The court correctly defined the term “negligence,” and, after submitting the issues of appellant’s negligence, instructed the jury in general terms to the effect that, if the plaintiff was guilty of negligence in any or all of the respects set out in defendant’s answer, and that the same contributed to his injury, the jury should take such negligence into consideration and reduce plaintiff’s damages according to the amount of negligence attributable to him. The court also gave appellant’s special charge No. 9, as requested, which was to the effect that, if the plaintiff, when he descended from- his caboose, “failed to look and listen for an approaching engine or car, and that his failure to so look or listen was negligence upon his part,” and that the same contributed to his injury, etc., the amount of the damages should be diminished in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to the plaintiff.

[1] We find no error in the rejection of appellant’s special charge No. 10, set out under its first assignment of error, to the effect that, if appellee stepped upon or so near to the tracks as that he could have been hit by a passing engine, and “failed to have with him a lighted lantern to enable the parties operating said switch engine upon said main line tracks to ascertain his presence,” and that such failure was negligence and contributed to the injury, the damages should be diminished in proportion to the amount of plaintiff’s negligence. Should we adopt the rule applied in some jurisdictions, and now the subject of apparent popular approval, that a judgment will not be reversed for an error, in the absence of some showing that it operated to the prejudice of the losing party, we would be at some loss to determine from anything that appears in the record that any injury followed the rejection of the special charge under consideration, for the reason that, while the plaintiff alleged his damages in the sum- of $15,-000, he was awarded a very much less amount, and, for aught that appears ¡in the presentation of the matter, the jury may in fact have diminished plaintiff’s damages, by reason of some negligence on his part, in one or more of the particulars alleged by appellant. But, regardless of this suggestion, the charge presented an issue of contributory negligence that was not alleged, and was therefore properly rejected.

[2] The special allegation in the respect under consideration was “that plaintiff violated a rule of the company, in that he went upon the tracks at night at the point where he sustained his injury, if any, without carrying with him a lighted lantern to enable parties operating a switch engine to ascertain his presence.” No evidence whatever that the appellant company had any such rule is cited, and we, hence, are authorized to say that there was no such evidence. Appellant seems to concede this criticism of the special charge, but seeks to avoid its effect by invoking the latter part of his special plea of contributory negligence, designated as “d”; that is to say, by relying upon 'the allegation that appellee “took no precaution whatever to guard against being injured by a passing train or engine.” In the absence of a special exception, such general allegation might authorize the introduction in evidence and, hence, the submission, of *357 some special act relied apon as contributory negligence, not otherwise pleaded; but where, as here, there is a special allegation made in relation to the act under consideration, the special will limit and control the general.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 355, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ft-worth-d-c-ry-co-v-keeran-texapp-1912.