Gifford v. Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co.

249 S.W.2d 190, 151 Tex. 282, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 458
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1952
DocketA-3542
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 249 S.W.2d 190 (Gifford v. Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co.) 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
Gifford v. Fort Worth & Denver City Railway Co., 249 S.W.2d 190, 151 Tex. 282, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 458 (Tex. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewster

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries filed by O. Glenn Gifford, petitioner, against Fort Worth and Denver City Railway Company, respondent. A trial court judgment for *284 petitioner based on the jury’s answers to special issues was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals and the cause rendered for respondent. 244 S. W. 2d 848.

The sole question for decision is whether the Court of Civil Appeals was correct in holding that petitioner was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in stepping in front of the train which struck and injured him.

Petitioner and another boy started hitchhiking from Hugo, Oklahoma, to their home in California. They got to Wichita Falls one morning and stayed for some time on the highway north of the city but failed to catch a ride. They then went east several blocks and spent most of the day in and around the north end of respondent’s railway yards, where the tracks are on an earthern embankment about 14 feet higher than the adjacent ground. These tracks crossed Front Street on an underpass thus permitting the uninterrupted flow of motor, pedestrian and other traffic on that street. To reach respondent’s yards the boys went through this underpass and turned north paralled with the railroad tracks several hundred feet and stayed a few hours under the railroad bridge which crosses the Wichita River. Later in the afternoon they left the bridge and walked on a path along the east side of respondent’s right-of-way for some distance. Then they left this path and went just off the right-of-way dump and stayed until about 10 P. M. under some trees. About dusk some passers-by told the boys they probably could catch a truck towards Amarillo by going several blocks to Scott Street, which was the street where they had tried to catch a ride early in the day. About 10 o’clock P. M. the boys got back on the east side of the right-of-way and walked back along the path they had traversed that afternoon and in the direction of the underpass. About 150 feet from the underpass they turned west across the embankment. They crossed the first of the three tracks on the embankment and as they were attempting to cross the middle track they were struck by respondent’s north-bound train, which consisted of a diesel-electric switch engine and about 20 freight cars. Petitioner was seriously injured and his companion was killed.

The jury found that the place where petitioner was injured was commonly used by the public as a pathway, which fact was known by respondent or in the exercise of ordinary care could have been known to it; that petitioner was on respondent’s premises as a licensee; that respondent’s train crew failed to keep a proper lookout, to ring the bell, to blow the whistle and *285 to have the headlight on the locomotive burning; which omissions were negligence and a proximate cause of petitioner’s injuries. On the defensive issues the jury found that petitioner was not negligent in failing to see or hear the train, in going upon the tracks or in not using the nearby underpass; that he did not fail to keep a proper lookout; and that his injuries did not result from an unavoidable accident.

After noting that Texas courts “set aside jury verdicts with considerable reluctance,” the Court of Civil Appeals summarized its conclusions as follows: “None of them, however, do we construe as holding that one who steps immediately in front of a moving train, knowing the tracks to be in use, and takes no precaution for his own safety is not guilty of negligence as a matter of law. While we are aware that appellee says he stopped, looked and listened before going upon the tracks, we hold that the circumstances and physical facts speak louder than words and show beyond any doubt in our mind that he neither looked nor listened. Had he done so, he could not have failed to be aware of the train immediately upon him.”

The only direct evidence relating to petitioner’s actions just before he was struck by the train comes from his own testimony. He said that before going upon the tracks he and his companion “looked both directions to see if there were any trains on the track or lights or anything to warn us that there was a train or anything on the track.” All other evidence material on the issue of contributory negligence was circumstantial, from which we think reasonable inference may be drawn either that petitioner did look and listen, as he claimed, or that he did not. This falls into two classes: (1) that which relates to whether he could have seen the train had he looked and (2) that which has to do with whether he would have heard the train had he listened.

As to whether petitioner could have seen the train had he looked, it is undisputed that the engine which struck him was black and that there were three street lights in each block of Ohio Street, which parallels the above-described embankment on the west side, and one street light near the underpass on the east side. These lights were higher than the embankment. Otherwise, on the issue of visibility the testimony is conflicting. Several witnesses testified that the moon was shining and that these street lights lighted up the embankment and the tracks where petitioner was hurt, while several swore that the street lights did not illuminate it because they shed their rays down and not *286 out onto the embankment. Among the latter was the sheriff who went to the scene of the accident. He swore that it was dark on the embankment; that he used his flashlight because he could not see without it; that when he “got up on top there wasn’t any light at all up there from those street lights on Ohio on that dump.” Two police officers patrolling the area just after the accident were called to the scene and they testified that it was “pretty dark up there” and that they used their flashlights in finding petitioner and the body of his companion.

There was evidence that the headlight on the locomotive was not burning at the time of the accident. Mrs. O’Mary, witness for petitioner, who was sitting on the front porch of her home, which faces the underpass and the embankment, saw the respondent’s switch engine and cars going north just before pepitioner was struck. She said she “never noticed any light” on the switch engine; that if it had had a light on it she could have seen it; that “I cannot remember seeing any light because there wasn’t any light at that time”; that she heard a scream, after which the train shortly stopped and then started back toward the point where petitioner had been struck; that soon after it began going north “it (the engine) turned on its lights and went to whistling,” and that “this was the first time there was any lights on that diesel locomotive while you were sitting there looking.” Fred Stimpson, a young college student, had gone to a trailer camp with a young lady friend to see her horse and was waiting in the street near Mrs. O’Mary’s home for the young lady to return by way of the underpass from a horseback ride. He had been talking to Mrs. O’Mary when the accident occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.2d 190, 151 Tex. 282, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gifford-v-fort-worth-denver-city-railway-co-tex-1952.