Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Norton

119 S.W. 702, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 478, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 377
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 S.W. 702 (Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Norton) 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, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Norton, 119 S.W. 702, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 478, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 377 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

This is tlie second appeal in this cause. *481 (Norton v. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co., 108 S. W., 1044.) At a recent trial plaintiff recovered a judgment for $12,500 for personal injuries sustained from the derailment of the train on which he was a passenger, the wreck occurring on the morning of February 22, 1905, about six o’clock, while yet dark, between Sandy Fork and Waelder.

The first and second assignments of error contend, as it was contended on the former appeal, that there was evidence entitling defendant to a submission of the defense that the defect in the track was the work of malicious third persons, committed so immediately before the wreck that no negligence could be ascribed to defendant in respect to it. The court refused to submit the issue.

The facts introduced in evidence by appellant as furnishing a foundation for such issue are substantially as follows:

Defendant’s repair gang had the day before worked on the track at this place. Smith, the foreman, testified: “I know the place where the wreck occurred; ten or fifteen minutes before six o’clock on the evening before the wreck occurred in the morning I was over that particular track; the track, on the evening of the 21st of February, the day previous to the wreck, was in good condition. There were two-thirds of the new ties that I was putting in that were spiked; the old ties that remained in the track were also spiked; I didn’t disturb the old ties in any way. From my experience in track work, that track was left, on the evening of the 21st' of February, in a reasonably safe condition for the operation of passenger trains, consisting of two engines and thirteen ears, some of which were sleepers. It was perfectly safe for the rate of speed of twenty-five or thirty miles an hour.

“I had a pushcar there that I used about trucking ties and tie-plates, and I had used it that day in distributing ties to put in the track, and I put the car off about a" couple of rails ahead of where the wreck first started off about six feet, or maybe a little bit more, in the clear. I put it off on the south side of the track in the evening before the wreck happened in the morning. The car would weigh between 750 and 800 pounds. I didn’t look for the car next morning, but I found it afterwards down at Buck Branch, down the embankment there. The place where I found it was about four or five hundred or six hundred feet from the wreck; I found it off down the dump there. None of the men had moved the car down there; they did not move it. All of my men went to Sandy Fork with me the evening before the wreck. There were no men other than the men of my gang working there the day previous to the wreck. I left this pushcar the evening previous to the accident right about where this sleeper or baggage car was turned over; I mean the private sleeper; on what we call the south side of the track. I don’t remember what time the next day the pushcar was found, but it was quite late in the day when we found it, because we had no use for it at that time, and I was under the impression that there was no need for hunting for the car because I thought the car was either under that baggage car or the sleeper, and later in the day I found the car about four or five hundred feet east of that place, rolled off down the dump, I think about twenty or twenty-five feet from the track, just turned loose and *482 turned over. Two men could pull the car around and put it on the track, but to handle the car like it ought to be it would take from four to six men to take it up and put it on the track. That car was in my charge and control. I did not give any one permission to use that car that night.”

Cross-examined, testified: “I don’t remember whether it was in the forenoon or afternoon that I found this pushcar, because I didn’t look for it; I thought all the time it was under the sleeper or baggage car, because I knew right where I left the pushcar. It is not a fact that this pushcar was not moved on the night of the wreck but the night previous; it was moved that night of the wreck, because I know just exactly where I left that car. It had not been moved the night previous that I know of; I know that it was not moved on the night of the 20th, hut on the night of the 21st it was moved.”

Harris, the engineer on the head engine of the wrecked train, testified that there were two engines, he being on the lead engine; that he was running about twenty-five miles an hour; that when he came near this place he noticed that the track was what they called badly out of line—the track was not straight, but kinked. There was a sort of elbow in the track—quite a kink; he supposed when he first discovered this it was about fifty feet ahead of him. He made every effort to stop as soon as possible because it was a bad place, and he didn’t think that at a high rate of speed it was a good place to go over—it was calculated to derail the train. He did not remember how much kink it was; it was pretty badly out of line, though he didn’t know how many inches. When asked if one or both rails were out of line he stated that it seemed to him the entire track was moved to the side. The engine he was running did not leave the track; “the second engine you might say did not leave the track, although it was badly tipped over, and I believe the tender of the second engine was derailed and two baggage cars, I think, and I believe a private car that was next to them, and I think three coaches.” He stated also that the track was badly torn up and he didn’t think that after the wreck you could have told anything about the previous condition of -the track.

Bagsdale testified that he was acquainted with the track at this place; that as engineer of a freight train he went over it, going west about an hour ahead of the train that was wrecked, and didn’t observe any kink in the track, though he couldn’t sáy that his attention was right on the rail, as he was keeping a lookout ahead. He did not observe anything of the kind; the track appeared in good condition, about the same as all tracks would be. He was going over this place at fifteen or twenty miles an hour, and had one engine.

Simpson, who was the conductor on' Bagsdale’s train, stated when he passed over this track about three o’clock a. m. (which made it-about three hours prior to the wreck) he was on the platform of the caboose and didn’t observe anything wrong with the track. “There was not to my knowledge a kink in the track sufficient to cause the derailment or wreck of the train. If it had been there bad enough to derail a train, I ought to have observed it. I didn’t notice anything there when I passed over it to indicate such thing on the track. , . , *483 I can’t recollect whether I looked back or not, but I didn’t pay any attention to it, looking at it; we generally feel these places, usually low places, or kink or sink, whatever you call it. We generally feel it sitting in the caboose, and I didn’t observe anything unusual there more than any other place on the road. I was not standing there leaning over looking down at the track, and didn’t have any headlight in the rear end. The only light I had was a white hand-light; can’t say whether I had it in my hand or standing down by the side of me, but it was close around; it was a moonlight night, but hazy. I was not taking any particular observation of the track, but I am a right close observer about that, and I could feel it.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W. 702, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 478, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-v-norton-texapp-1909.