Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Sallee

120 S.W. 216, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 23, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 426
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 216 (Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Sallee) 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
Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Sallee, 120 S.W. 216, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 23, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 426 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

McMEAHS, Associate Justice.

Virgil Sallee brought this suit against the Houston, East & West Texas Railway Company for himself and as next friend for Ids minor child, Annabel Sallee, to recover damages growing out of personal injuries received by said minor alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the railway company.

Plaintiff alleged that the child, then twenty months old, wandered from the nearby residence of its parents upon or in dangerous proximity to the track of defendant’s railroad and was struck and injured by a passing engine and cars composing a freight train then being operated over the road. Liability is predicated, in the plaintiff’s petition, on the alleged negligence of the operatives of the freight train in failing to use ordinary care to discover the presence of the child on or near the track in time to have prevented injury to her, and in failing to use the degree of care required by law to prevent injury to the child after its peril was actually discovered by them.

The defendant answered by general demurrer and special exceptions, and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the parents of the child in permitting her to go upon or near the track.

The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict was returned in favor of the railway company against Virgil Sallee, the father, and against the railway company in favor of the child for $2,500, upon which verdict judgment was duly entered. From the judgment in favor of the child, Annabel Sallee, the railway company has appealed.

We think the evidence establishes conclusively that the child was struck by some part of a car in the train. The mother, Mrs. Sallee, testified that about ten minutes before the train passed the child was with her on the gallery nf her residence; that she left the child there about 10:30 a. m., when she went into the kitchen to begin the preparation of dinner, and she had thus been engaged about ten minutes when her attention was attracted by hearing two sharp blasts óf a locomotive whistle; that she hastened to the front gallery to see what the matter *25 was, and to see where her child was, and as she came out on the gallery she saw the child, which had on a bright red dress, lying on the end of the cross-ties on the opposite side of the track; that the engine and one car had then passed the child; that it looked to her as if every wheel would strike the child as it passed; that she immediate^ ran toward the place, and by the time she got there the train came to a stop and the conductor picked the child up and handed it to her through the opening between two of the cars; that just at this time the child began to cry; that it had received a cut in the top of the head, beginning at the edge of the hair and running back about the center of the head, and that in -the region of the wound there was blood and what appeared to be grease; that her arm was also hurt. She further testified that the railroad track for about a half mile in the direction from which the train came was straight and the ground clean and free from weeds, and that there was nothing to obstruct the view of the operatives of the train from the time the train came on the straight stretch of track until it reached the point where the child was. Her testimony on this point was corroborated. She further said that when she looked and saw the child it was lying on the ends of the cross-ties, on its back, with its head in the direction the train was going, and remained in that condition until picked up by the conductor.

There was also testimony to the effect that there was much use made of the track at this point by people walking on the track, and especially by the children of the neighborhood and of the village of Splendora, in going to and from school. She further testified that when she looked, the train was coming rapidly to a stop, and did stop after five or six cars had passed the child.

The engineer of the train in question testified that from Splendora, which is about a quarter of a mile south of the place where the child was, the track is on a down-grade; that the up-grade began about opposite Mr. Sallee’s house and continued until, the section house, one-eighth or one-fourth of a mile beyond, was reached; that he had about twenty or twenty-five cars and was running at a speed of twenty or twenty-five miles per hour at the time he passed Splendora, and after passing that point he shut off steam and was just rolling along to make a stop at the section house; that when he reached a distance of about two or two and a half telegraph poles from where the child was he saw on the outside of the track and at the end of the cross-ties what appeared to be a piece of red cloth, and that he watched this-object until within the distance of about one and a half telegraph poles, when the child raised its head from between the ends of two cross-ties, and he then for the first time knew that the red object was a child; that he immediately applied the emergency air-brake and brought the train to a stop as soon as it could be done, and the train stopped after the engine had passed the child the distance of five car-lengths, or 150 feet. It was shown that telegraph poles are 150 or 160 feet apart. The engineer further testified that he was keeping a lookout for persons on the track all the time; that as near as he could tell as to the position of the child, before it raised up, it was lying down between the ends of two ties on its hands and face, with its head down beneath the ties, and the first that apprised him that the object was animate was when *26 the child raised up its head; that the ground between the end of the ties was hollowed out and of sufficient depth to cover a little child like Annabel; that after he discovered it was a child he used every effort knowñ to himself, and, he supposed, to any one else who runs a locomotive, to stop, and did all that could possibly be done to stop the train in time to prevent the injury.

The fireman testified that after the train passed Splendora he saw, about eight or nine hundred feet ahead, something on the right side of the track that looked to him like a small piece of red cloth; that at that distance it looked like a red speck; that he. watched it until the child raised up, and that up to that time the object looked no larger than a man’s hand; that he did not at any time tell the engineer to stop.

The father and mother of the child testified that the ends of the cross-ties, at the place where the child was hurt, were partly sunk in the ground, and the top of the ties at their • ends came up about three inches above the surface of the earth.

The railway company, in order to determine the distance that a person occupying the position that the child occupied, as testified to by the engineer, could be seen by an engineer operating a locomotive at the place of injury, conducted the following experiment. A full-grown negro man, dressed in a blue jumper and overalls, was placed in the same position, with his head at the end of the ties and his feet extending directly out; the witness Yarbrough, a resident of Splendora and not in the employment of the railway company, then got upon a locomotive, which was only a short distance away, and sat just behind the engineer and on the same side of the cab; the engine then began to back slowly toward Splendora.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W. 216, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 23, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-east-west-texas-railway-co-v-sallee-texapp-1909.