Hines v. Kelley

226 S.W. 493, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 1, 1920
DocketNo. 6465.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 493 (Hines v. Kelley) 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
Hines v. Kelley, 226 S.W. 493, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

PLY, O. J.

This is a suit for damages instituted by. Saletia Kelley and W. G. Kelley, as the mother and father of Claude Kelley, deceased, against Walker D. Hines, Director General of Railroads, and the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio -Railway Company, in which it was alleged that Claude Kelley, an employé of appellants, was killed through the negligent derailment of a train of the railway company. The appellants answered by general and special exceptions and general denial. The cause was tried by jurj)- and resulted in a verdict against W. G. Kelley and in favor of Saletia Kelley for $15,000, and the judgment was so rendered.

The facts were sufficient to show that appellants were guilty of negligence in running the train at too high a rate of speed, oyer a track near or on a curve, by which the trahji was derailed and Claude Kelley, an employé of appellants and the son of appellees, was killed. W. G. Kelley was the divorced husband of Saletia. Kelley, and she depended for her support.on her son, Claude Kelley.

*495 The first and second assignments error assail the action of the court in permitting W. S. Higgins to testify that the railway company had given instructions that, whenever a derailment of a train involving damages occurred, a board consisting of the superintendent,' assistant superintendent of maintenance of way, assistant superintendent of motive power, and two disinterested citizens should convene to ascertain the cause of the wreck, fix the responsibility, and make recommendations, and that such a board was convened on the occasion of the wreck in question. The witness swore as to the personnel of the board, Walter K. Breed-en being one of the disinterested citizens who was on the board. The first assignment, is long and argumentative, and it and the second, which are grouped, are followed by a statement containing, not only the evidence of Higgins, but of Breeden, consisting largely of questions and answers, argument of counsel, suggestions and rulings of the court, as well as the report of the board of examination, which was not placed in evidence. A statement filled with irrelevant matter, arguments of counsel, and questions propounded to a different witness from the one whose evidence is attacked can have no salutary- effect, but is confusing and should meet with scant consideration. The only point presented by the assignments is: Was the evidence of Higgins, as hereinbefore stated, in regard to the organization of a board, permissible? We think it was. The evidence of Breeden and Higgins was not objected to as to what they ascertained on the ground where the wreck occurred, and this testimony was relevant and proper to show that the witnesses were not volunteers, but had gone to the place at the request of appellants to ascertain the cause of the wreck. The officers of appellants formed two-thirds of the committee or board. It was the board of appellants, and no valid reason is assigned in the brief for the attempt to keep secret the fact that the report was made. The report, had it been admitted, could not be classed as analogous to a coroner’s findings as to causes resulting in death. The coroner’s inquest is excluded on the ground of res inter alios acta, but the report of appellants’ board would not come under that designation. Appellants were parties to the investigation made by them through a board of their own appointment. None of the arguments used by Judge Gaines in the case of Boehme v. Woodmen of the World, 98 Tex. 376, 84 S. W. 422, would apply to the report of the board of appellants’ own creation. However, the question of admission of the report is not before this court, and cannot be passed upon. We merely hold that it was not improper to permit Higgins to testify that he was upon the ground where the wreck occurred at the instance of appellants, and in company with Of others sent there by appellants. None of the authorities cited by .appellants has any bearing on the point at issue.

It is not apparent that appellants were injured by the admission of the testimony. If the jury might have drawn the inference that the report would have been introduced in evidence by appellants, had it been favorable to them, so the jury might have presumed that appellees would have offered it in evidence, had it been favorable to them. The record discloses no evidence of prejudice or passion on the part of the jury.

The third assignment of error is overruled. The charge of which complaint is made was undoubtedly correct so far as it went, and if appellants deemed that there were matters omitted which should have been given, they should have made an effort to supply the omission. This is settled by numerous decisions.

It was permissible to permit the witness Anderson to testify that he was in the vicinity of and saw the train pass and that it was running a little faster than usual. The witness lived not a great distance from the track and’ frequently saw the train pass and observed its speed many times, and it was not improper to allow him to state that it was running faster than usual. A strong preponderance of the evidence sustained the opinion of the witness. Witnesses not experts are permitted to testify as to the speed of trains. Elliott on Evidence, § 683; Merchants’ Transfer Co. v. Wilkinson, 219 S. W. 891. The fourth assignment of error is overruled.

Higgins testified that he had been engaged in “railroading since 1907, in civil engineering and maintenance of way work, measuring the speed of trains,” etc. This was not contradicted and fully qualified* the witness to testify that he could estimate the speed of the train by the scene of the wreck and that the facts indicated to him that the speed of the train was about .45 miles an hour, and that the prescribed speed was 40 miles an hour. The witness was also properly permitted to testify that the proper altitude for the curve where the wreck took place was 2% to 3 inches. The evidence was properly admitted, and the fifth assignment of error is overruled.

The sixth to the eleventh assignments of error, inclusive, are overruled. The evidence showed that the train was behind schedule time and was running at such a rate of speed that when the engine left the track it ran for 120 to 130 feet on the rails, then turned over and its momentum was so great that it slid for at least 100 feet on- the ground. Part of the train was on one side of the track and part on the other. The train was approaching a curve when the engine left the track, and was running at. a rate of speed by five miles an hour more *496 than was permitted by the schedule time. It was a clear case of negligence in running at a rate of speed not deemed safe, in order to make up lost time. The eyidenee also showed that the track was not laid as it should have been, and the jury was justified in finding that the accident would not have occurred but for these acts of negligence. The evidence was sufficient to show that Claude Kelley was earning from $160 to $180 a month at the time of his death, and that the most of it was given by him to his mother. It does not matter how she expended it, when she got the money from her son. It measured the amount of her pecuniary loss.

In the very nature of things, it was not supposable that appellees could know exactly what caused the derailment. Claude Kelley was dead and his mother was in no position to know the cause of the derailment. She alleged generally that it occurred through the negligence of appellants.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 493, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hines-v-kelley-texapp-1920.