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

85 S.W. 28, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 76, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 413
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 85 S.W. 28 (Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co. v. Walker) 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. Walker, 85 S.W. 28, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 76, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 413 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit instituted by appellees to *77 recover damages arising from injuries received by falling into an unguarded and unlighted pit in a roundhouse. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in the sum of $5,000. This is a second appeal. (1 Texas Law Journal, 76 S. W. Rep., 1, 228.)

On the former appeal of this cause the judgment of the District Court was reversed because of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a verdict. It was held that appellee having general knowledge of the construction of the roundhouse was charged with a knowledge of the existence of a pit in the stall in which he was injured unless he had been led by appellant to believe that there were stalls without pits. The court through Chief Justice James said: “If, for instance, he had been so informed by his foreman, or that unlighted stalls contained no pits, or perhaps if the stall had no track running into it, such or similar circumstances or inducements, in the absence of actual knowledge on his part, might reasonably have warranted plaintiff in assuming and acting upon the supposition that no such danger was there.” These matters were merely suggested as illustrative of the position taken by this court, but one of them seems to have been seized upon by appellee and was pleaded and sworn to by him.

The first allegation as to the conversation of appellee with the foreman appeared in the second amended original petition which was filed after the former decision of this court, less than two months before the trial. The facts on the appeal with the exception of the additions hereinafter indicated, are practically the same as on this appeal and reference is made to our former opinion for a full statement of such facts and a full discussion of them. The additions and amendments made to the former evidence are fully set forth in the further course of this opinion.

On the former trial of this cause not one word was said about anything that was told appellee by the foreman as to the pits in the roundhouse being lighted, but on this trial he testified: “I went in there trying to find my boss, and he told me always to come to him when I wanted anything, and I went in there; he told me always where there were stalls that had pits in them they had lights, and unlighted stalls had no pits. . . . I had this conversation with Zureschke about what stalls had pits in them the first night I worked there, what brought up the conversation was this: I got lost in the roundhouse and when I told him about it he told me how to look out for pits. He said: ‘The stalls that had pits in them had lights in them, and unlighted stalls had no pits/ I found out after I got hurt that there is a pit in every stall.” On cross examination he said: “It is a fact that this is the first time that I have ever made that statement under oath. . . . My lawyer, after my case was reversed, asked me if I and Zureschke had ever had any conversation, and I told him we did and he wanted to know what I told him. I told him what I have testified to on the stand. He said: ‘I will go and see Mr. Zureschke and see if he remembers it/ . . . After my case was reversed, Mr. Jones asked me what about my conversation with Zureschke and I told him what Mr. Zureschke said about these unlighted stalls having no pits, and he remarked he would go and see Zureschke. I didn’t know when my case had been reversed, and I was having a conversation with Mr. Jones, my lawyer, that if Zureschke *78 had told me that the stalls in the roundhouse that had no lights in them had no pits, that Zureschke would not have been telling the truth. I found out that all the stalls had pits in them after I had worked there some time. I had been working there several nights before I found it out.” Zureschke testified: “Every stall in the roundhouse has a pit, and did when I worked there, and when plaintiff was hurt, and I knew that fact and I did not tell John R. Walker to the contrary. If I had told John R. Walker that there was not a pit for every stall in the roundhouse of defendant I would have lied, and I did not lie.” Appellee stated that Levi Hines was present when the conversation with Zureschke took place. He also stated that none of the pits was unlighted on the night that he had the conversation with Zureschke except two on the last end of the roundhouse. He afterwards modified this by saying that he did not know whether the stalls 14 and 15 were lighted that night or not. He swore that there were no lights in these two stalls on the night he was hurt. He fell into the pit in stall 14 or 15. Stalls 14 and 15 were not the ones described as the two last end pits which were unlighted on the night that the conversation was had with Zureschke. Each stall in the roundhouse had a pit in it and had a track running into it.

It is evident that the testimony of appellee was reconstructed to meet the former opinion of this court in this case. It is incredible that the conversation stated to have taken place should have never been referred to by appellee in his testimony before if such conversation had ever occurred. It would have been the most reasonable way to account for his act in walking into a pit with the knowledge of the existence of which the circumstances would charge him, and- the very language that he used when his counsel asked him if he ever had any conversation shows that he knew what ivas in the opinion of this court and narrated a conversation that fitted it in a way to indicate that it had been expressly manufactured for it. How was it possible that this conversation should have sprung fully panoplied from his brain, when it had never been thought of before, and in answer to a general question as to whether he had ever had any conversation with Zureschke? And yet appellee reiterated that he had never heard the opinion of this court read and did not know even at the time of the trial on what ground it had been reversed, and that his counsel had never told him one word about the grounds of reversal, nor on what theory the case was to be again tried. The evidence of unerring manner in which he responded to the pregnant suggestion of the opinion of this court without the knowledge of one word of it, if it were true, would be miraculous, and is so utterly repugnant to reason that the bare statement of it is the strongest refutation of its verity. That statement, as well as the narration of the circumstances under which the conversation was had, should destroy it without other evidence.

In addition to the inherent weakness and inconsistencies of appellee’s testimony, was the testimony of Zureschke, who was not, and had not been for a long while, an employe of appellant, Avho denied ever having told appellee that where a stall Avas not lighted there was no pit. Upon what theory could the foreman have made such a declaration in the face of the facts? What motive could have prompted him? Men seldom act without a motive and nothing has been, or can be suggested *79 that could have induced the foreman to tell one of his servants a falsehood so utterly unreasonable, and false and preposterous.

It is argued by appellee that as he stated that Levi Hines was present and heard the conversation with Zureschke, appellant ought to have had Hines to testify and the fact that it did not do so is a strong circumstance in favor of the truth of appellee’s statement.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W. 28, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 76, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-v-walker-texapp-1905.