Galveston, H. &. S. A. Ry. Co. v. Andrews

291 S.W. 590
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1927
DocketNo. 1928. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 590 (Galveston, H. &. S. A. Ry. Co. v. Andrews) 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
Galveston, H. &. S. A. Ry. Co. v. Andrews, 291 S.W. 590 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PELPHREY, C. J.

This is a personal injury suit which-resulted in a verdict and judgment for $40,000 damages in favor of appellee, Andrews.

Upon the occasion of the accident Andrews was the foreman of a switching crew of appellant, composed of Engineer Spence, Fireman Harrell, and Switchmen Johnson, McDowell, Moore, and Andrews.' The crew went from El Paso to Ft. Bliss to get some cars and bring them back to El Paso. They went upon the main'line about five miles to the track which leads to Ft. Bliss. They then proceeded to Ft. Bliss. After delivering some cars there they picked up an empty box ear on warehouse track No. 2, and “kicked” it on the forage yard track. It rolled a few car lengths from the switch and stopped. There was a string of three box cars already upon the forage track several car lengths beyond the point where the one car stopped. After kicking the one car on the forage track, the engine went back to the -switch and thence upon the manure track, McDowell and Andrews were riding on the front of the engine. The purpose in going -upon the manure track was to get two cars to be taken to El Paso. They found that the two cars could not be then moved. The general direction of the tracks at Ft. Bliss was north and south.

Andrews testified:

“When I found those cars weren’t ready for movement, I told McDowell, T will go over and couple the air in these three cars, and you can come back with the engine, and we will get them and go to town.’ The engine was standing still at that time. When I said that I think McDowell was standing on the footboard, and I was standing on the ground, about that close together (illustrating). The engineer and fireman were in the cab; that would throw them 12 or 15 feet from where. I was standing. I told McDowell I was going to couple the air in these three cars and we would take them back to town; I would line up the air and look at them while they were coming there. I says, ‘McDowell, I will go over and couple the air in these three cars while you boys come over there, and we will be ready to go. to town.’ Yes, sir, McDowell heard that, he was standing right by me. I don’t know whether any of the other crew heard it .or not. * * * After I instructed McDowell what to do, I gave the engineer a back-up sign, rand I walked across the track, and they moved south with the engine, backing up, and McDowell was riding on the footboard on the front end of the engine. I started across toward the three cars. It was just about a city block, I believe, across there from where I was to the three cars, not much further, straight across. It was level ground there; right straight across to the three cars; nothing in there at all; nothing but a barbed wire fence. * * * These three cars were standing just a little bit southwest of where I got off the engine, straight across. They were a very little south, they were pretty near straight across west, .almost west of where I got off the engine, and I think about a city block. The engine would have to go south and stop, and head in on-the switch, and come north to get to that cut of cars. I judge that engine would have to travel-about three blocks back to get to the switch, and after it had traveled that distance, then it would have to travel, just about that much further to get to the cut of cars. * * * There was nothing between the manure track and the cut of cars to interfere with the vision; you could see clear across; I could see the engine and everything. * * * I started across afoot to'this cut of cars, the three cars, and walked up to the south car .to see if the drawbar was open and see if the angle cock was open; and walked back to the next 'car and looked between to see if the air hose had been couplet! up or the couplings were made, and walked back to the other car and done the same thing, and walked back to the end of the car to close the angle cock so the air wouldn’t go through the train, and it would be ready to go back to town. I was fixing the cars so they would take the air when they were coupled. * * *
“When I got to the south end of the cut of cars, I remember looking at the drawbar and seeing if it was open, I don’t know whether I opened it or no't; it may have been open; and I looked at the angle cock to see if it was open. I had to step between the cars to couple the air hose; I coupled the air hose between the first and second cars, and I had to do the same thing all the way down the cut of cars. Then I went to the back of the cut of cars to see if the angle cock was closed or open here; if *592 it was open I would close it so the air wouldn’t go through the train. I think the angle cock was open at the back of the cut of cars. That had to be closed. The air line is a long pipe running under a car, and here is the angle cock; it bends off the end of the car like this. .A man has to get hold and shove it around. It is kind of like in a groove, and you have to lift it and shove it around. When the handle of the angle cock is crossways of the car, the air hose is closed, and when it is lengthways it is open. This angle cock is located right near the drawbar, and it was across the drawbar from where I was standing. I was coming north to the back end of this car, and that threw me on the right-hand side of the track, the east side' of the track. In order to close this angle cock at the back end, I would have to walk up in the middle of the track and reach around the drawbar and cut it off. I walked down to the end of the car, and walked around the end to look at the angle cock, and reached over the drawbar to cut the angle cock off, and about that time they hit the car. I reached to get hold of the angle cock and turn it; it was turned straight, so the air wouldn’t go through when they hit. When I say I cut the angle cock off, I mean I closed it, so the air can’t pass through the pipe. This angle cock was on the west side of the drawbar, and they stand off about a half a foot from the drawbar. I was standing right in front of the drawbar, and had just reached over for it when they hit me. I was right in the middle of the track, middle-ways between the two rails, and I was standing within about a half a foot of the drawbar. That was a box ear. * * * As to our custom and practice in actually doing the work — if 1 know a man is working under a cut of cars, I 'would never hit it until I saw that man and knew he was away from the cars and safe; that is the practice all over the yards, look out for each other, when you are moving cars around. * * * As foreman, I would lay out the work and tell them what to do. The engineer and fireman stay in the cab, and the man following the engine, the short field man, long field man, and foreman, each man has his place on the job. Any one can give a signal, if they see everything is all right and nobody around. If any member of the crew knows what is to be done, he can give a signal with reference to that work. Any signal that comes in his line, or under his observation, to be given, he would, give it. If a man is at a cut of cars and gives a signal for the movement of the engine, he gives it to the engineer if he can see him; if not, to another switchman, who gives it to him. If I see the engineer, I give it to the engineer. Any member of the crew is supposed to repeat a signal when he sees it and thinks it necessary or proper to repeat it.
“When I went across to this cut of cars, it was my purpose to go over there and inspect the cars and line up the air on them and get them ready to take to town. I was in that work at the time I was hurt.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-h-s-a-ry-co-v-andrews-texapp-1927.