Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway v. Wells

121 Tex. 310
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1932
DocketNo. 5425
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 Tex. 310 (Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway v. Wells) 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 v. Wells, 121 Tex. 310 (Tex. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice PIERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Annie L. Wells, for her own benefit and as next friend of and for the benefit of her minor son, Ray M. Wells, Jr., instituted this suit in the district court of Fort Bend county ag’ainst the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company for recovery of damages in the sum of $100,000 by reason of the death of her husband, Ray M. Wells; in a collision at a public road crossing in Fort Bend county on October 25, 1926, between a train and an automobile driven by the deceased Wells. It was alleged that the deceased Wells was an employee of the Gulf Production Company, a subscriber holding a policy of compensation insurance issued by the Gulf Casualty Company.

The deceased’s father and mother were made parties to the suit, but they disclaimed any recovery to which they might be entitled. The Gulf Casualty Company was also made a party because of its right of subrogation to the extent of the amount of insurance assumed by it and awarded by the Industrial Accident Board.

The railway company answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, general denial, plea of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased, and that the train which collided with the deceased’s automobile was engaged in and was an instrumentality of interstate commerce, of which the Congress of the [316]*316United States had assumed control through the Interstate Commerce Act, the Transportation Act of 1920, the Federal Employers Liability Act, the Federal Safety Appliance Act, and through the Interstate Commerce Commission Act and amendments thereto. That by reason of the Federal laws, any judgment recovered would be a burden on interstate commerce, and further, that by reason of the Federal laws and the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States the alleged negligence of Wells constituted a complete bar to any right of recovery by his widow and child.

The testimony shows that the train in question which struck Wells was an interstate train operated between New Orleans and San Francisco. It was scheduled to leave Houston on the day in question at 10:30 a. m., and left that point five minutes late. It reached Missouri City about three minutes late. Missouri City, where Wells was struck, is situated about fifteen miles west of Houston, and is not a scheduled stop for that train.

The railroad at Missouri City runs practically east and west, and in approaching Missouri City going west it is perfectly straight for a number of miles. Paralleling the railroad going into and through Missouri City is the Old Spanish Trail, a paved highway passing between the railroad and the business section of Missouri City. Just west of the station and close to it a public highway crosses both the highway and the railroad practically at right angles. At the time of the accident, and for some time prior thereto, the Old Spanish Trail was closed for repairs between Missouri City and Houston, and traffic was detoured from this road over the dirt crossing in question. This crossing was used by school children going to and from school every day. According to the evidence, this highway at the time deceased was killed was used constantly by the public generally. It was shown that quite a number of people lived north of the railroad tracks at this point, and that in sending their children to school and in going to any point south of the railroad in the vicinity of the town the dirt road crossing the railroad was used a great deal. The testimony shows that a great amount of freight was handled at Missouri City for the use and benefit of the town and other points out of Missouri City on the south side of the railroad, including not only the town of Missouri City, but Blue Ridge, an oil field, in which operations had been conducted for a long while, and were then being conducted by the Gulf Production Company and other large companies, and that such companies had quite a lot of [317]*317freight, express, and other matters out of Missouri City, and that all traffic from the oil field, as well as other territories south of the city, had to go to the railroad station at Missouri City and return therefrom by crossing the dirt road highway . just west of the railroad station.

It was further shown that the railroad company had arranged about the station house, and especially on the west and north sides thereof, parking space for the use of its customers and for trucks and wagons and persons having business with the company, and that at and about the depot building obstructions were present, and that these obstructions and the depot house cut off the view of trains approaching from the east going west, and that such trains could not be seen by persons west of the station until they had passed the station house and were close on the crossing. That a great number of passenger and freight trains passed through Missouri City each day going each way, and that many of the trains did not stop there on the regular schedule.

Some witnesses who were close by at the time of the collision testified that they were in a position to have heard the bell ringing, and yet they did not hear the bell ringing. Testimony was also introduced showing that after the whistle was blown at the whistling post, no more whistling for the crossing was done.

It was shown that Wells had some business to transact with the station agent. After transacting this business, he left the station a short time before the train arrived, and went to his automobile parked somewhere in the rear of the station a short distance from the crossing. No witness testified to having seen Wells or the automobile after he started his car ,and proceeded toward the crossing, except the witness Stevenson, the engineer, who did not testify as to the rate of speed the automobile was traveling. He testified in the following language: “I knew that people might be coming from the back end of the depot over that crossing. I have seen people about there before. * * * I knew that an automobile might be coming from around over there across this crossing.” He also testified that when he saw the automobile it was about twenty feet north of the track-approaching the crossing, and it appeared to him that Wells was looking right squarely at the train. A west-bound passenger train running something like fifty miles per hour, and behind schedule time, struck the rear end of Wells’ automobile as he was leaving the station going south and attempting to cross the railroad tracks, and knocked the automobile and [318]*318deceased a great distance, killing deceased instantly. There was testimony to the effect that the train after hitting Wells ran 350 or 400 yards before it stopped.

Walton, the train conductor, said that the train which killed Wells had a schedule time of thirty-eight miles per hour, but that it was late that particular day. Some other witnesses testified that it was running something like fifty miles or more per hour at the time. Harris, the general road foreman of motive power, who was riding in the engine at the time of the collision, testified that he saw the top Of the automobile go by from north to south just as it came in front of the locomotive. In describing it Harris used this language: “and just at that time the automobile slipped over the crossing just like that (indicating by a snap of the fingers).” He further testified in substance: I would judge the weight of that train to be 800 tons, and with a train weighing that amount moving fifty miles an hour, it takes its required time with the brakes to stop it.

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Bluebook (online)
121 Tex. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-v-wells-tex-1932.