Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Co. v. Stephens

203 S.W. 41, 109 Tex. 185, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 67
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1918
DocketNo. 2530.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 41 (Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Co. v. Stephens) 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
Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Co. v. Stephens, 203 S.W. 41, 109 Tex. 185, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 67 (Tex. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Questions certified from the Court of Civil Appeals of the Eighth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, in an appeal from the District Court of Harris County.

This case is before us on the following certificate of the Court of Civil Appeals, towit:

“This was a suit by Joe K. Stephens to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted upon him while in the service of the Houston Belt & Terminal Railway Company, and upon trial before a jury verdict and judgment in his favor was rendered for $15,000.

Appellee, upon the date of his injury, was a minor, eighteen years of age, and was employed by appellant as one of its car checkers in its yards situated in and near Houston, Texas, and it was his duty to enter the numbers, initials and seal numbers of cars received by appellant in said yards in a book provided for that purpose; this book was kept in the office of the chief clerk in the freight depot at the end of appellant’s yards, and whenever appellee had finished checking a train of cars it was his duty to return the book to the chief clerk’s office. Appellee had been employed for one month as a call boy by the International & Great Northern Railway Company prior to his employment by appellant, and had been in the service of appellant for one month prior to the date of his injury. On the occasion of his injury appellee and a co-car checker, Clifford Joplin, had just finished checking a train of cars and the day’s work was ended, but it was appellee’s duty to return the seal record back to the office of the chief clerk. Just at this time a train passed and appellee and Joplin undertook to board the caboose of same for the purpose of riding to the depot, which the train would pass, where it was appellee’s duty to go to deposit his record book. Joplin succeeded in boarding the train, and appellee was attempting to do so Jjut before being able to lift himself into the caboose the movement of *188 the train carried him forward and against an upright switchstand adjacent to the track, and the contact with the switchstand precipitated him to the ground and the wheels of the caboose passéd over and severed one leg. The train which he attempted to board and from which he was thrown was a through Trinity & Brazos Valley train, which was departing for the north from appellant’s yards without any stop. The switchstand was negligently placed too near the track.

The train was operated by the Trinity & Brazos Valley Railway Company, and the record is silent as to the relation between such company and appellant, except that it appears the train was in and departing from appellant’s yards and was upon its tracks and would be upon appellant’s tracks until it passed the depot for which appellee was bound.

The evidence pertinent to a consideration of the .questions certified is as follows:

Appellee Stephens in his own behalf testified:

"I worked for the Houston Belt & Terminal Company; I began to work for that company on September 29, 1908, in the yards, at Houston, in the capacity of car checker. Chief Cleric Hope employed me. I went down there and asked him for a job and he said, Yes, there is a place open for a car checker,’ and he asked me did I know how to do that, and I told him I had never done that kind of work, and he said I would do all right, and he put me to work. The only instructions he gave me was about what I would have to do each day, just the kind of work I would have to do checking cars, and things like that. I worked there one month, up to the time of my injury. During that month I was checking cars. Every train that would come in; while there I was checking cars. How I would do that work, that is, what I mean by checking cars, I had a book called a seal record and when a train came in I would have to go out and take the seals off the side doors, see what they were, some were numbers and some were just letters; then the little end doors, I would have tg take them, too, and write them in the seal record, put them down in the seal record; I would do that work whenever a train would come into the yard. The yard was about two miles long, I guess; I don’t know where the limits are, but the main tracks across are about two,miles; there were two yards.' Well, there is one they call the Yew Yard,’ then an old yard and the 49 was the South Yard; I guess there would be three yards if you count those separately. Those yards were named by 49 and the Old Yard. The old yard was right- along where the Santa Fe freight depot used to be, the first tracks before they built this new part down there; that was inside the corporate limits of Houston. The 49 yard was about three miles or three and one-half miles below the Old Yard. The dimensions of the Old Yard, the one in the city, the length of-the yard, it was a mile and a half across, or two miles, and the width is—it has about seven or eight tracks, I suppose. In the Old Yard in the city here,' I think there is seven or eight tracks, may be ten, I am not certain how many; there was four in the 49 yard then, I believe, I am not sure. *189 My duties required me to check cars in both of these yards. The trains that I would check in the Old Yard would generally be on the side track, on either side of the main line; they were on different tracks, they would pull in on any, most, that was open. I didn’t have a particular place where I checked every train. The way I would find out when I had to check a train, the chief clerk would tell me. I would have to check about fifteen or eighteen or twenty trains a day, may be fifteen or eighteen. Assuming that a train has come into the Old Yard, the one in the city, and that I have been directed by the chief clerk to take the seal numbers, to check it, the way I would proceed: The chief clerk would tell me, whenever a train would come in, that I would have to go out and check it, and I had a book there that we called a seal record, and I would go out where this train was, it would be on one of the side tracks, and I would start at one end and take the side seals and put them down in the book, then, I would go in between and get the end seals, and after finishing that side, I would walk on the other side and take them the same way as the other side, then take the seal record back to the office. The seal record was kept in the chief clerk’s office. It would be on his desk when he would tell me to check a train, or in one of the pigeonholes. I would then get the record and go out into the yard. After I finished checking I would take it back to the chief clerk’s office. The seal record would be in my possession only the times when I was checking trains. The office in which the seal record was kept was in the old freight depot, right on Preston by the passenger depot. The trains that I would have to check would be located, they would be on different tracks, in different parts. This depot where the seal record "was kept with reference to these seven or eight or ten tracks that I have mentioned as being in the yard, the Old Yard, is at the north end of the tracks. With reference to the depot, some of the tracks was a good piece away, then others would run right up to it. The closest track to the depot was the main line. I don’t know the numbers (meaning the tracks), I didn’t know they were numbered. The yard was crooked, there is a curve in the yard; most of them are straight on the other side, some straight ones on the other side.

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203 S.W. 41, 109 Tex. 185, 1918 Tex. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-belt-terminal-railway-co-v-stephens-tex-1918.