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

106 S.W. 897, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 279, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 897 (Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Wafer) 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. Wafer, 106 S.W. 897, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 279, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 226 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

*279 Application for writ of error dismissed for want of jurisdiction. *281 The action was by Wafer, who alleged that he was an employe of defendant and while performing his duties in defendant’s yards, inspecting a gauge arid oil pump located on what is known as the “dead engine track,” and while standing on or near said track with his back in a westerly or southwesterly direction, and while his attention was engrossed in watching said pump, a switch engine of, defendant was operated eastward on said track at an unlawful and dangerous speed, and without any notice or warning struck plaintiff and seriously and permanently injured him.

The grounds of negligence alleged were that the engineer saw plaintiff in his dangerous position, or should have known it, and failed to slow down or stop the engine, but negligently ran upon plaintiff; and also that defendant negligently failed to have a switchman or other employe on the footboard of the tender to keep a lookout and warn persons, who might be upon the track, of the approach of the engine.

The answer was general denial, that plaintiff’s injuries were caused by risks and dangers incident to his employment, and by his contributory negligence.

The first assignment complains of the seventh paragraph of the charge which submitted the issue that if plaintiff, an employe engaged in the performance of his duties, stood upon or in close proximity to the track and was struck, and that if defendant should have had some one on the footboard of the tender to keep a lookout ahead and to warn persons upon or in dangerous proximity to the track, and that such failure was negligence, and such negligence the proximate cause of plaintiff being struck, and that plaintiff himself was not guilty of negligence contributing to cause his injury, to find for plaintiff.

There are two points directed against this charge, neither of which is well founded. One is that there was no evidence warranting the submission of the issue, and the other is that the court should not have submitted such issue in the absence of any rule requiring a switchman or other employe to be stationed on the foot-board of the tender for such purpose.

It was testified to by the witness Borcherding, general foreman of the car department, that he knew a switchman was generally on the footboards in switching in the yards; and that he thought it was necessary for men to be on the footboards the way the engine is going, that he had often seen them there. He did not testify to the existence of a rule to that effect, as is asserted by appellee, but said “I think there is. I do not know.”

The evidence was that this dead engine track was not a regular switch track, and was as a rule used only for the purpose of conveying engines to and from the roundhouse. Plaintiff’s duties called *282 him to this place and he had been watching the gauge of the oil pump through a little hole in the roundhouse fence. The pump did not seem to be working and plaintiff stepped upon the track and from there was watching the gauge over the fence when he was struck. He testified that he stood there three to five minutes, or something like that, looking over at a car to see if it was taking up oil. In doing this he was looking east and the engine came from the wést. There was testimony showing that no warning was given of the approach of the engine, and no one was stationed on the footboard. Plaintiff testified that as a rule this track was not used for switching, but for carrying engines in and out of the roundhouse, and when they had any switching or bringing in of cars to do, some of the crew generally came and told him that they were coming in, that this was the regular practice. That no one told him about this engine coming, and the first he knew about it being upon the track was when it hit him. At that time there was hammering going on and engines in the vicinity were making noises that prevented him from hearing it approach. The place of the accident was ten or fifteen feet from the crossing of a public street. The engineer, Gaddis, testified that there was no person on the footboard of the tender that he saw, and that when he discovéred plaintiff the latter was looking in the opposite direction. Borcherding, who was the first man to reach plaintiff, testified that he saw no one on the footboard. The testimony of these witnesses, who testified in person, may have impressed the jury as evasive on the subject, and from what they stated or admitted, it seems to us that it was admissible for the jury, to conclude that no switchman was there. Borcherding testified that his attention was on Mr. Wafer, and that if there had been a switchman on the footboard he would have been right near Wafer.

We conclude that the question of negligence of defendant did not depend on the existence of any positive rule requiring persons to be on the footboards. Whether or not such a precaution was demanded by the dictates of ordinary care, depended not upon a rule entirely, but fundamentally upon the exigencies of the situation. Here was a track used only occasionally and in a limited way by engines or cars in the yards of defendant/ where the track might be used at any time by some employe in performing a duty, as it appears this plaintiff was doing at the time; the employe not suspecting, and having reason, from the ordinary practice in such matters, not to expect, that an engine would attempt to back over it without notice of its approach, and it can not be said, as a matter of law, that ordinary prudence would not require, under such conditions, the precaution of stationing some person on the footboard. The case is not that of a trespasser occupying a track, but of an employe occupying it in the performance of his work. We think the charge complained of was not erroneous. The testimony of plaintiff, if accepted by the jury as the true version of the transaction, as it doubtless was, would acquit him of contributory negligence. They had the right to disbelieve the contrary testimony.

The second and third assignments complain of the following *283 portion of the charge: “And by contributory negligence is meant some negligent act or omission on the part of the defendant which, concurring or co-operating with some negligent act or omission on the part of plaintiff, is the proximate cause of the injury complained of.” Also the following: “In determining whether or not plaintiff was guilty of negligence, or whether or not defendant was guilty of contributory negligence, you may look to all the surrounding facts and circumstances in evidence before you, bearing upon these issues.”

The part of the court’s charge which explained and submitted the issues the jury were to decide, and for or against whom to find according to their determination of such issues, was so plain and unmistakable that the jury could not have been misled or confused by the inadvertent misplacing of the words “plaintiff” and “defendant” in the portions of the charge which are complained of.

The fourth and fifth complain of refused charges which were as follows:

1st. “You are charged that negligence can not be presumed from the mere happening of the accident, if accident it was.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 897, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 279, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-v-wafer-texapp-1907.