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

10 S.W. 207, 10 S.W. 208, 72 Tex. 344, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1297, 72 Tex. 353
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1888
DocketNo. 5821
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 10 S.W. 207 (Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Porfert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court 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. Porfert, 10 S.W. 207, 10 S.W. 208, 72 Tex. 344, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1297, 72 Tex. 353 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Goulard, Judge.

Appellee Charles Porfert brought this suit on the 23d day of August, 1883, against the appellant, the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company, for damages alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant’s servants in managing and propelling its engine and cars, by which negligence he was knocked off of his wagon while attempting to cross the railroad track and injured, causing a compound fracture of the left leg. below the knee, wounding him severely in many places, injuring him internally, and bruising him all over from head to foot.” The damages are specified and itemized as follows: “The company by the carelessness and negligence of its servants and agents, and by the collision aforesaid, and by the wounds, bruises, and injuries aforesaid to plaintiff done, have caused him great pain and suffering and have ‘damaged him for life, transforming him from a hearty and robust young man to a cripple for life, to his great and irreparable damage as follows, to-wit: To loss of time from July 23 'to the filing of the amended petition (March 4, 1885), $2500; to peril and fright at the time said injuries were sustained, $2500; to mental anguish suffered by plaintiff in consequence of said injuries, $5000; to pain and suffering consequent on said personal injuries, $20,000; to impaired capacity for [347]*347labor in. consequence of weakness and permanent injuries as aforesaid, §20,000.”

Plaintiff also alleges that he observed the sign ‘ railroad crossing;' that, before attempting to cross he looked and listened both to the right and left and neither saw nor heard anything to indicate the approach of a train,” and after taking these precautions he attemped to cross, when he was hurt as previously stated; that he was thirty-two years old at the time of the accident; that by reason of the injuries aforesaid he was confined to his bed six months; that he can not be restored to a healthy and robust condition, but must henceforth be a sickly cripple and a miserable invalid; that the defendant's engine was running at a great speed, forty miles per hour; that no bell was being rung or whistle blown at the time and distance required by law on the locomotive before crossing the public highway; and that all other usual and necessary precautions were disregarded, and that he was guilty of no contributory negligence whatever.

Defendant pleaded not guilty, contributory negligence on the part of' plaintiff by attempting to cross the railroad on a narrow and obscure lane not exceeding twelve feet in width without using his senses of sight- or hearing, giving no heed to the whistle which was duly given by the engineer at the proper time and place; and that if plaintiff has not long since recovered from the alleged injuries it has been through his own fault and imprudence, among other things hy voluntarily contracting a loathsome disease.

It is also alleged that defendant after the injuries for the space of about one year had plaintiff fed, nursed, and cared for in the best manner, and supplied with comforts, medicines, and medical attention, at its-own expense, in the sum of §1000, which is pleaded in setoff.

As nearly as can be stated the accident occurred as follows: About 4 o’clock in the afternoon of July 23, 1883, Charles Porfert, aged — years, was driving a two horse wagon on the Nelson road, a public road near the Medina River, intending to go to San Antonio. The dirt road approached the defendant's railroad from the south and crossed the railroad about two hundred and twenty yards west of the bridge on the river. The railroad here runs nearly east and the dirt road nearly north. The wagon road on the south side runs through a lane about twenty-two feet in width. At the time plaintiff was driving along the road toward the crossing there was a brush fence on the left side of the lane, green corn growing in the field, a few trees along near the line of the fence, sunflowers and hloodweeds growing in the right of way. There was a cut for the railroad through rising ground from the bridge toward the crossing from three to four feet deep and the waste dirt was piled or banked up in the usual way, and on these embankments and in the right of way sunflowers and hloodweeds were growing thick and several feet high. This cut did not extend from the bridge to the crossing, but was between. [348]*348the two. At the crossing the track of the railroad was a little above the natural ground, eight or ten inches, so that the pull for a wagon to the top of the track was slightly upward. The evidence is conflicting, but it was amply sufficient to justify the jury in finding that as plaintiff approached the railroad crossing along the lane he could not see an approaching train until he got close to the track, within a few feet of it. At the track and on it the road being straight could be seen for over a mile each way. Plaintiff had worked on this road and was familiar with the locality; he knew the train signals, whistles, and bells. There was a whistling post at the proper distance from the‘crossing and a sign at the ■crossing for travelers designating it as a railroad crossing.

The wind was from the south or southeast. Just before plaintiff reached the crossing, about eighteen feet from it, he stopped to have one Baden move his wagon out of the way. Baden was loading wood on his wagon from the brush fence, and his son was assisting; his son moved the wagon so that plaintiff could pass. A few words were exchanged and plaintiff drove on. While stopped at this point plaintiff listened but heard no train. He drove the horses up to the track, looked and listened again he says, and saw and heard nothing. When the wagon was on the track he looked and coming from the west was a train about thirteen rail .lengths away—-three hundred and ninety feet. It was a construction drain, locomotive and two flat cars. He says it was running very fast, that he raised his stick and was in the act of striking his horses, then moving and off the track, when the locomotive struck his wagon on the rear end, tearing the wagon to pieces and causing the injuries to him as .set out in the petition. The train passed on and stopped several hundred yards east near the section house and returned to him. He was found unconscious about fifteen steps from the cattle guard in Baden’s field.

Baden says he heard no whistle or other signal until the train Avas ■crossing the lane; he then looked and saw only the plaintiff’s horses standing tin the opposite side of the track, the wagon gone. The engineer and fireman on the train say the regular signals for crossing Avere given at the proper time; and the engineer says plaintiff when he saw .him first had his head down looking east; that he gave alarms at once, reversed his engine, called for brakes, and did all in his power to avoid the collision. Plaintiff says he was driving slowly to avoid overturning .a can of butter he was taking to San Antonio.

Defendant produced a number of witnesses who testified that an engine and train could have be seen from nearly every point on the lane ■all the way from the crossing to the bridge. The roadbed had been raised about ten inches after the accident before these witnesses took observations, some trees had been cut away, the brush fence had in part been removed, the corn and weeds were not in the way to any extent, being young and smaller.

[349]*349The employes testified that the train causing the accident was moving at a rate not exceeding eighteen miles an hour when plaintiff was first seen by them.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W. 207, 10 S.W. 208, 72 Tex. 344, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1297, 72 Tex. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-v-porfert-tex-1888.