Houston East & West Texas Railway v. Kopinitsch

268 S.W. 923, 114 Tex. 367, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 86
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1925
DocketNo. 4122.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 923 (Houston East & West Texas Railway v. Kopinitsch) 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 East & West Texas Railway v. Kopinitsch, 268 S.W. 923, 114 Tex. 367, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 86 (Tex. 1925).

Opinion

*369 Mb. Judge BISHOP

delivered the opinion of the Commission oE Appeals, Section A.

The Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District has certified to the Supreme Court the question as to whether the evidence hereinafter quoted presents for the jury the issue of discovered peril. The evidence is as follows:

“Mitchell, the driver of the automobile, testified:

“ ‘The accident happened, I would judge, between eight thirty and nine o’clock in the morning; at the crossing that I understand was at Mount Houston. At the time the train collided with said automobile at the crossing I was driving the automobile, and the first I knew of the approach of the train was just before it struck the automobile. When I first drove up on the right of way where I could see I looked both ways and didn’t see anything and then P drove up on the crossing and was struck. It was a passenger train. I did not hear any alarm at all given by said train as it approached the crossing; I did not hear the bell rung or the whistle blown on said engine or train before it collided with the automobile. In approaching said crossing I was driving the automobile at, I judge, five or six miles an hour. I could not estimate exactly the speed the engine and train was going when it collided with the automobile, but it was running very rapidly. Within my knowledge the speed had not been slackened or lessened any before it struck the automobile. There was nothing on the track or right of way in approaching this crossing from the direction in which the train was coming to obstruct the view looking this way of those on the engine. The approach to the crossing was sandy and cut out in ruts. * * *

“ ‘The railroad track, I judge, was straight where it approached said crossing from the direction the train was coming from. I really could not say for what distance the railroad track was straight, but I judge it to be a considerable distance, and I would judge it was down grade.' ”

“D. Mullins, fireman on appellant’s train at the time, testified:

“ ‘On the 6th day of November, 1921, I was the fireman on the passenger train coming from Shreveport to Houston, where there was an accident out at North Houston. Mr. Sid Reynolds was the engineer that morning. The train was late that morning. I don’t remember whether the schedule has been changed since" that time or not, but if it has not been changed the train was due to arrive here about seven-forty, I believe. The accident happened about nine o’clock that morning out about nine miles from Houston. We Were something like one hour and forty-five minutes late. After the train left Humble that morning it had stopped before it reached the point where the accident happened; it had stopped at the Mount *370 Houston Station, and the accident happened after we left that station,' just about one mile this side of .Mount Houston towards Houston. * * *

11 Coming into Houston on that train I was on the -left hand side, or the east side of the locomotive, the engineer being on the opposite side. The crossing where the accident happened has no name that I know of; all of the officials say it is a private road crossing. I do not know where the road that crosses there runs from and where it runs to. It is not a shell road, it is a dirt road and runs directly across the track, and after it crosses the track it curves south, and gets off of the right of way proper. The east side of the track, that is open territory there; the main road turns, I believe, north, but there is an opening there; you can go either way you want to after you pass the right of way fence. I mean that on the east side that .it opens out, there is open territory there and you can go either direction you want to. The right of way between Mount Houston and this crossing is fenced on both sides and the fence is something like fifty feet from the track on either side. The right of way between the fence and the track for about one-fourth or one-half of a mile back towards Mount Houston from this crossing is perfectly clear. The track from Mount Houston down to this crossing is a straight track and there are no obstructions on the right of way from Mount Houston to this crossing to prevent anyone from seeing. The track is practically level, it might be inclined to be a little bit down grade, but if so, a very small per cent. On this side of the crossing, coming on down towards Houston, the county is just level. There are some bushes, after you cross the crossing; there is á wagon road runs along with the right of way fence on the east side of the right of way fence, and outside of the road there is some small bushes and trees. Coming from Humble towards this crossing, those trees would be something like one hundred feet, I should judge, to my left from the crossing; they are just small trees and brush. That condition does not exist all the way from the point of the accident back up the right of way to Mount Houston, but just part of the way; I should say about one-fourth of a mile, perhaps a little more. * ™ ®

“ ‘I first observed this automobile the morning of the accident when we were just about one-fourth of a mile from the crossing, something like one thousand feet. The automobile at that time was standing a little bit east of the crossing; he was in the act of turning the car around, it looked to me like; I saw'him cut the wheels around towards the track and pull up towards the track at a very slow speed. At that time he was something like sixty feet from the crossing, I should judge, and we were about a thousand feet, or one-fourth of a mile, from the crossing at that time. The train was *371 running about forty miles an hour. I saw him at a point about sixty feet from the crossing, over on the east side of the track, saw him pull the car around and start towards the crossing; I believe he was really standing still when I first saw him, and I saw him start immediately thereafter towards the crossing, in low speed, it seemed to me. I think he was running in low; I have driven a Ford car a good deal, and I think he was running in low. He continued on toward the crossing and I watched him all the time as he continued on towards the crossing. I did not tell Mr. Reynolds that I saw him, did not call his attention to the fact that I saw him. I saw him when he pulled right up on the crossing and the back end of the car was just about even with me, I guess, when the engine hit. There were three men inside of the car and one sitting on the side door, one boy sitting on the side. There was no change in the speed of the train from 40 miles an hour from the time I first saw him until the accident occurred. When the driver of the car got upon the track he tried to speed across. I mean by that that he speeded up the ear just as he got on the track, after he got the front wheels on the track. I mean that you could see the car give a little increase in its rate of speed. But from the time I first saw him sixty feet from the track, when I think he was standing still, until he got the front wheels on the crossing, there was no change in his speed, he was running slowly and going directly towards the track. When 1 first saw him I was about one-fourth of a mile from the crossing, about one thousand feet, about that, and I did not notice any effort, of his to stop after I first saw him start towards the crossing.

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268 S.W. 923, 114 Tex. 367, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-east-west-texas-railway-v-kopinitsch-tex-1925.