Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Burch

151 S.W.2d 288, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1941
DocketNo. 3782.
StatusPublished

This text of 151 S.W.2d 288 (Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Burch) 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
Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Burch, 151 S.W.2d 288, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 368 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

On the 7th day of August, 1937, near midnight, in the town of Silsbee, appellee, T. V. Burch, drove his motorcycle into the side of a freight train of Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company, as it moved over the crossing of appellant’s tracks and the public highway leading from Silsbee to Beaumont. This suit was instituted by ap-pellee to recover damages for the injuries suffered by him in the collision. On trial to the jury, answering special issues, appellant was convicted of negligence proximately causing the accident, in the following respects: (a) The crossing in issue was more than ordinarily dangerous as a night time crossing. That appellant knew of the conditions surrounding the crossing, and in the exercise of ordinary care should have known of the condition surrounding the crossing, (b) The failure of appellant to maintain a permanent watchman, to give people approaching from the north warning, was negligence, (c) The failure of appellant to maintain an electric or automatic light was negligence. Appellee was acquitted of contributory negligence, and all other defensive issues were found in appellee’s favor. Judgment was for ap-pellee for the damages assessed by the jury in the sum of $7,910, from which appellant has prosecuted its appeal to this court.

It is our conclusion that appellee, as a matter of law, was guilty of contributory negligence in driving his motorcycle into the side of appellant’s freight train, and that, on this ground, the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to instruct a verdict in its favor. The facts are as follows :

(1) Condition of appellant’s tracks. Appellant maintains three tracks at the crossing in issue, running parallel; the main track, one switch track sixty feet north of the main track, and a switch track south of the main track. The highway. The principal street in the town of Silsbee runs north from the crossing in a straight line several hundred yards; it crosses ap *289 pellant’s three tracks at right angles. The highway has a hard surface twenty-four feet wide, and its right-of-way at the crossing is seventy-six feet wide. The highway between the switch track on the north and the main track is hard surfaced, with holes in it covered with loose sand, shell and gravel, but the holes in no way interfere with the traffic and do not constitute a hazard at the tracks. The highway approach to the railroad track, the main line, on which the train was moving, was lower than the railroad track, the difference in elevation being as follows: At two hundred feet from the crossing the highway is 2.1 feet lower, at one hundred feet 1.10 feet lower, and at fifty feet the difference in elevation is only six inches.

(2) Traffic on the highway at the time appellee was injured. The accident occurred near midnight. Appellant’s freight train was moving west over the crossing. Two automobiles were parked at the crossing waiting for the train to clear the crossing. (If this fact was controverted by appellee’s testimony, we say on the testimony as a whole, that it was clearly established beyond all reasonable doubt.) As appellee drove his motorcycle towards the freight train, there was no obstruction at any time between him and the train. The weather conditions did not interfere with the view of one driving towards the train. Appellant had installed on its right-of-way, in close proximity to the main line track crossing, an electric light which was burning.

(3) The facts of the collision. The following eyewitnesses of the accident testified: Claude Gambrel, employed by the United States government as a livestock inspector; Robert Dixon, appellee’s friend and riding his motorcycle behind appellee;-Perry Tucker, appellee’s friend and riding his motorcycle behind appellee; E. L. Wil-liford, deputy sheriff of Hardin County; appellee, T. V. Burch. Appellee was well acquainted with the railroad crossing and the condition of the highway at the crossing. We give the following summary of appellee’s testimony: In substance it was that as he approached the crossing he did not discover a train on the track until he was on the first track, that is, the switch track which was some sixty feet from the main line trade; that in attempting to stop he put on his brakes, but was unable to stop until he was in close proximity to the train; that the step of one of the cars caught his motorcycle and threw him under the train; that when he stopped he thought he was in the clear) but was not; that he put his feet on the ground and was in the act of backing the motorcycle back when he was struck by the train. He denied that there were any automobiles standing on the approach to the crossing waiting for the train to clear. That as he went down the street he was going between 12 or IS miles an hour; that his two companions, Tucker and Dixon, were following behind him, all three of them riding motorcycles; that he did not turn either to the right or left, giving as an excuse his fear that his motorcycle would skid and throw him under the train; that he stopped in the clear of the train, and then for some reason his motorcycle moved forward throwing him into the train. He denied making any statement to the doctors who attended him as to how the accident occurred.

Claude Gambrel, Federal livestock inspector, testified in substance that starting home that night, and using the same crossing in order to get home that Burch later on used, he found that when he approached the crossing same was blocked by a freight train; that a car had already stopped north of the moving freight train so he stopped his car on what they called the house track or switch track north of the main • line track; that both his automobile and the automobile ahead of him were headed south; that when he drove up there the engine had passed moving west and was beyond his range of vision. He then told how, after having stopped there, two motorcycles came up and passed him on his left.. He did not see the third motorcycle; that one of these motorcycles passed the other and went up and stopped close to the train; that both motorcycles stopped ahead of him; that the motorcycle which stopped closest to the train, shortly after it stopped (he estimated S or 10 seconds) the motorcycle roared and lunged forward, and the boy on the second motorcycle jumped off and ran up toward the train; that when this motorcycle first stopped it was in the clear of the train; that there was sufficient space for the train to move forward without striking it and that the motorcycle did move forward; that he did not know what caused the motorcycle to go forward. He reiterated his being positive that the boy on the motorcycle stopped same before he went underneath the train; and that he could see him from where he was sitting. He said that he did not know Mr. Burch, *290 and as far as he knew he had never seen him before the accident. He said the first automobile parked was almost directly in front of him between the switch track and the main line track; that he was about on the switch track; that Burch was parked almost directly in front of him so he couldn’t tell just how far away from the train he (Burch) was, but he was far enough away from the train to clear same; that it looked to him like when the motorcycle lunged forward that Burch was trying to turn it to the left; that Burch stopped five or ten seconds before the accident occurred; that he couldn’t see Burch’s feet so he didn’t know what he was doing with them.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 288, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-c-s-f-ry-co-v-burch-texapp-1941.