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

69 S.W. 461, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 356, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 312
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 461 (Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Sandifer) 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. Sandifer, 69 S.W. 461, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 356, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 312 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

HUNTER, Associate Justice.

By agreement of counsel two cases are embraced in this record. One was filed by S. B. Sandifer in his own right against the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company and the city of Weatherford to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by his wife and minor daughter, Miss Esther, occasioned by the sudden fright and shying of his horse while they were driving at night on Oak street, in the city of Weatherford, the same being an embankment and approach to the crossing of the said railway company’s track across said street, whereby they with horse and buggy were precipitated from said embankment to the solid rock bottom of a ravine nine feet below, and were seriously, painfully, and permanently injured. The other ease was brought in the name of the said minor daughter by her father as next friend for serious and permanent injuries occasioned by said fall.

Each defendant filed a separate answer of not guilty and contributory negligence, praying that, in case judgment was rendered against it, it have judgment over against the other for the same amount,—the city claiming that the railway company was primarily liable because under the statute law of the State, as well as by the ordinances of the city of Weatherford, it was required to build the approach and keep it in safe and good repair, while the railway company alleged that in the compromise and settlement of a certain law suit then pending in the District Court of Parker County, wherein the city of Weatherford was plaintiff and this railway company was defendant, instituted to compel the railway company to restore the crossing of its track on Oak street to a good condition as required by law, it was agreed that the railway company should build a bridge and approaches thereto on Oak street, one of which lay between the said bridge and the railway crossing of the street, to the satisfaction of the city, and in consideration thereof the city was to forever maintain the same, and the suit was to be dismissed and settled; that it did build the bridge and approaches according to *358 the contract and they were accepted by the city, and by reason thereof the city was bound to keep the approaches to the crossing in repair and was liable to the railway company for failing to do so in case judgment was recovered against it by reason of the neglected condition of the approach.

The cases were tried by a jury, and verdict and judgment went against both defendants in each case as follows: In favor of S. B. Sandifer for $2023, and in favor of Miss Esther for $1500; and this appeal is prosecuted by the railway company, the city having filed in the District Court cross-assignments of error praying' also for a reversal of the judgment against it.

The act of negligence alleged against both defendants was that the approach to the crossing of the railroad track was in Oak street and on the right of way of the railway company, and was dangerous, being about twelve feet high and without any railing or guard to protect travelers from falling over the same.

The record discloses the following facts: About 1890 the railway company built its track into the city of Weatherford, then as now an incorporated city under the general laws of the State, crossing Oak street at about a right angle. Oak street ran eastward from the business portion of the city to and beyond where the appellees resided on said street. The grade of the railroad track seems to have been a few feet above the grade of Oak street and the crossing was made bad by reason thereof. A controversy arose between the city and the railroad company over this crossing, which resulted in a suit by the city to compel the railroad company to lower the grade of its road at Oak street. This, suit was finally compromised and dismissed, the order showing only that, the suit was settled and dismissed, each party paying one-half the costs. The suit was settled by an oral agreement made by and between the-general superintendent of the tracks, bridges, and buildings of the railroad company, and the mayor and street and alley committee of the city under authority of the city council (though no order appears to that effect), whereby the railroad company at its own cost was to build a bridge twenty feet wide and ninety feet long on and along Oak street, across a ravine which crossed said street, beginning about eighty feet east of the track and extending eastward, and construct the approaches, to said bridge at both the east and west ends thereof, and the city was. to forever maintain the same and keep the same in repair. The bridge was to have railings on each side, but none was required for the approaches and none has ever been built. The approach at .the west end of this bridge was constructed by raising a dirt embankment about three or four feet high and from nineteen to thirty feet wide between the1 railroad track and the west end of the bridge along and in Oak street, the bridge and embankment forming part of the street. The bridge- and embankment were all on the railway company’s right of way, which was 2Ó0 feet wide at this place, its track being on the west side thereof. The crossing and approaches were thus made good, and the mayor and *359 street and alley committee were satisfied with the work, and the city, as shown by oral testimony, accepted the same, but no order or resolution of the city council was ever entered on the minutes to that effect. At the west end of this bridge the embankment is about six inches narrower on each side than the bridge, and on the left side going west towards the track of the railway the embankment for forty or fifty feet from the west end of the bridge is precipitous and about nine or ten feet high from the solid rock bottom, of the bed of the ravine. On the other side the embankment is about three to five feet high above the general level of the ground on that side.

About 8 o’clock at night of January 25, 1901, the wife and minor daughter of Mr. Sandifer were driving westward on Oak street in a buggy from their house going to prayer meeting at their church, which .stood west of the railroad crossing. It was dark, but the horse was gentle and the way well known, and the ladies had often driven over the crossing both in the daytime and at night. After crossing the bridge the horse took sudden fright at something which the occupants of the buggy did not see or hear, and shied or jumped to the left and lost its balance and went down the embankment, the ladies being thrown from the buggy, Miss Esther falling on her face on the solid rock below and on her elbows, one of which is by reason of the injury, stiff and crooked now, and both were bruised and strained and have given her great pain. Mrs. Sandifer was bruised, and among other injuries suffered a fracture in the lower joint of the arm—known as Colies’ fracture, which means, the doctors say, a split in the lower end of the arm bone. Her injuries are permanent and serious. She will not again have complete use of her arm.

There was no railing or fence along the embankment to prevent persons or vehicles from falling down the precipice, and by reason thereof the embankment was a dangerous approach to the railroad crossing, and both the city and the railway company knew its condition.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 461, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 356, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-colorado-santa-fe-railway-co-v-sandifer-texapp-1902.