Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Redeker

100 S.W. 362, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 312, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 311
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 100 S.W. 362 (Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Redeker) 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, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Redeker, 100 S.W. 362, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 312, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 311 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by J. W. Bedeker and his wife, Mrs. Lou Bedeker, to recover damages on account of sickness and injuries caused the wife by reason of appellant’s train, upon which she was a passenger, being held at Ft. Worth, Texas, on the evening of August 20, 1905, from 5:10 o’clock p. m. to 8 o’clock p. m. of the same day.

The material facts are substantially as follows: Mrs. Bedeker resided at Joshua, Texas, on appellant’s line of railroad and about twenty miles from Ft. Worth. She was afflicted with a large ovarian tumor and went to the Protestant Sanitarium in Ft. Worth for the purpose of having an operation performed, removing it. The operation was performed and the tumor, weighing about twenty pounds, removed on July 20, 1905. After the operation Mrs. Bedeker remained at the Sanitarium until August 17, 1905, when she was dismissed by her physicians as being sufficiently recovered to return to her home. She went, however, from the sanitarium direct to the residence of her mother-in-law in the city of Ft. Worth, where she remained for about three days with a view of gaining more strength before starting on her trip home. J. W. Bedeker *314 had on August 19, 1905, purchased a ticket over appellant’s road from Joshua to Ft. Worth and return, and went to the latter place to aceompány his wife home. On the next day, August 20, about 4 o’clock in the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Redeker repaired to appellant’s depot in Ft. Worth for the purpose of returning to their home over appellant’s railroad. At this time, appellant was running a passenger train from Cleburne, Texas, to Purcell, in the Indian Territory, and return. This train passed through Joshua, the home of appellees, and was scheduled • to arrive, on its return from Purcell, in Ft. Worth at 5 o’clock p. m., and depart for Cleburne at 5:10 or 5:15 p. m., .arriving at Joshua at about 6:05 p. m., the same day. When appellees arrived at the depot in Ft. Worth Mr. Redeker examined appellant’s bulletin board and observed that this train was marked “on time” and then purchased a ticket from appellant’s agent for his wife. At five o’clock said train arrived at the depot in Ft. Worth and appellees got on board. The appellee, J. W. Redeker, had but one leg and was hardly capable of rendering his wife sufficient assistance in boarding and alighting from the train, and he informed appellant’s train porter or brakeman, who was present, and whose duty it was to aid passengers in getting on and off the train, that his wife had recently undergone a very serious surgical operation and was weak and that when they arrived at Joshua he must assist her off the train. Appellees entered a coach and took their seats expecting the train to go out 'on time. This, however, it did not do, but remained there under the car shed until 8 o’clock that evening. When Mrs. Redeker entered the coach and took her seat she was feeling well, but the train standing there was practically surrounded by box cars, etc., the breeze cut off and the weather and car in which she was sitting extremely warm and sultry. Appellees were not informed that the train would be delayed and remained in the coach thinking every moment the train would go forward on its journey. Mrs. Redeker was weak and debilitated from the operation she had undergone and on account of the extreme heat and discomfort she was compelled to endure in the car on account of the delay of the train, she became very weary and nervous, and after the train had remained standing at the depot for more than an hour she overheard some stranger remark that the train would not leave Ft. Worth until 8 o’clock that night. When this information was received Mrs. Redeker in her extreme weakened and nervous condition, produced by the delay of the train and the excessive and debilitating heat to which she was thereby subjected, suffered a nervous shock and collapse which rendered her practically helpless. At this time none of appellant’s employes were in sight and had not been since appellees took their seats in the car. The nervous shock and collapse suffered by Mrs. Redeker disabled her to such an extent she could not then leave the train and her husband having but one leg was unable to assist her off. While the train was at Ft. Worth and after Mrs. Redeker had experienced the shock and collapse, she desired to enter the water closet to attend a call of nature, but her husband upon attempting to open the door found it locked. She continued to grow worse, got sick at her stomach and after the train left Ft. Worth, being unable to longer control herself, she discharged her urine upon her clothes. She suffered great pain in her hips •and abdomen and when Joshua was reached she had to be placed on a *315 cot and taken to her home. She testified that at this time she was cold all over and thought she was in a dying condition. She was confined to her bed for two weeks with fever every day, and the strain upon her urinal organs while on the train, together with the nervous shock and collapse, produced serious injury thereto, causing intense pain and finally resulting in a chronic bladder trouble, which, there is testimony to show, will probably never be cured. There was no satisfactory or sufficient excuse shown for the delay of the train at Ft. Worth. The conductor in charge thereof was notified in a few minutes after its arrival at Ft. Worth that the train would not go out until 8 o’clock that night, of which he informed the engineer and train porter, but did not inform appellees. This conductor testified, and it was not contradicted, to the effect that the porter on this train did all the duties of a brakeman, that it was the duty of the porter to assist the passengers on and off the train and the porter’s duty or his own duty to inform the passengers that the train would be delayed at Ft. Worth. He further testified that if the porter knew there was a sick lady on the train it was his duty to tell her to get off the train that it was going to be delayed. Neither the ticket agent of appellant who sold J. E. Redeker the ticket for his wife, nor the conductor in charge of the delayed train, was informed that Mrs. Redeker had recently undergone the operation for the removal of the tumor or that she was weak and debilitated on account thereof.

Appellant has filed in this court a written waiver of all of its assignments of error, except the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh, and these are insisted upon only to support the questions raised by the following propositions thereunder: “(a) That damages, if any, sustained by Mrs. Redeker by reason of the fact that she was weak, debilitated and in bad condition from her recent operation were damages special in character and not within the reasonable contemplation of the parties, and for which no recovery can be had unless notice that such damages were likely to accrue was given to the defendant at the time her ticket for passage was purchased and the contract for transportation was entered into; (b) That notice given to the carriers after the contract was entered into as to such special damages, even though such notice were given, would not make the defendant liable for the resulting damage; but in order to fix responsibility on defendant the notice must have been given at the time the contract for passage was made by the purchase of the ticket; (c) That in any event notice to a negro porter on the train, a mere menial and the lowest order of subordinate, was not such notice as in any event would fix the responsibility of the carrier, particularly in a case where, as.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W. 362, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 312, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-colorado-santa-fe-railway-co-v-redeker-texapp-1907.