Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Keeling

142 S.W. 108, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 142 S.W. 108 (Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Keeling) 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 & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Keeling, 142 S.W. 108, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 34 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

This suit originated in the county court of Harris county, Tex., and was for damages for personal injuries claimed to have been received by a railway mail clerk who ran between Houston and Denison in attempting to alight from his car at Denison. The evidence shows that on arrival of the Houston Texas Central train at Denison there were usually two stops; that is to say, the train was stopped a little short of the depot, about 25 feet from it, in order to cut off one or more of the rear coaches to leave open a public crossing, the train moved on into the station, a truck was run up to the mail car, the mail was unloaded thereon, and carried on the truck across the station to the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway. The case has been heretofore appealed, as will be later adverted to, and the difficulty that has been found in the case arises from testimony indicating that the stop made at the time the plaintiff was injured was not the final stop, but was the stop for the purpose of cutting off the cars; that nevertheless the mail truck was brought up to the mail car, and the plaintiff was thereby induced to believe that it was the final stop, and in attempting to alight from the car, the train being suddenly moved again, he was injured.

The suit was originally brought against the Houston Texas Central Railway Company and the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company. See51 Tex. Civ. App. 386, 112 S.W. 808. It was reversed and rendered as to the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company, against whom liability was predicated by the petition on the fact that the employe operating the mail truck, one Hubbard, did not warn plaintiff of the danger. The Court of Civil Appeals, as stated, reversed and rendered it as to the Missouri, Kansas Texas, for the reasons that Keeling, the plaintiff, was not a passenger on the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway, and Hubbard, the servant of the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company owed him no duty. That court also reversed the case as to the Houston Texas Central because the trial court had used in its charge, as measuring the carrier's duty, the expressions: "A high degree of care," and "utmost care." Afterwards, apparently on motion for rehearing, the question arising on said charge was certified to the Supreme Court (reported 102 Tex. 521, 120 S.W. 847), and the Supreme Court, while criticising the expressions used in the charge, held them sufficient. Nevertheless on return to the Court of Appeals (121 S.W. 597) the case was reversed as to the Houston Texas Central Railway Company on another ground, the court holding that as appellee testified that he knew there were two stops, one the "cutting stop" and one the final stop, and was induced to believe by the mail truck being there that it was the final stop, and as the mail transfer man, Hubbard, was in the employ of the Missouri, Kansas Texas Railway Company, he could not be held to be an agent of the Houston Texas Central, and, as there was no evidence that any employé of the Houston Texas Central Railway Company saw plaintiff as he attempted to alight, therefore no negligence, from all the circumstances, could arise as against the Houston Texas Central Railway Company from the testimony.

We find ourselves unable to agree to the correctness of this last-mentioned decision. The allegations of plaintiff's petition were substantially as follows: That plaintiff was a passenger on defendant's railway, the Houston Texas Central. That customarily the *Page 110 train stopped at final stop; that the mall truck was pushed up to the car, the mail unloaded, and it was transferred to the Missouri, Kansas Texas; the Houston Texas Central train remaining where it was until some hours later. It was alleged that employés of both roads operated the mail truck, and that such servants were servants of both roads. It was alleged that the accident happened on the final stop, or at a stop which plaintiff was induced to believe was the final stop by the action of the truckman. It was alleged that the car had no end doors; that plaintiff must alight from the side door; that he was stepping out of said door on to said truck when the train, through defendant's negligence, was suddenly and violently moved; that defendant knew, or ought to have known, that plaintiff would leave the car, their failure in this respect being alleged as negligence; that the defendant failed to warn plaintiff in any manner that it was about to move said train, and this was negligence. The charge of the court, in so far as it is material in this connection, was as follows: "In the discharge of his duty he (plaintiff) had no control or management of said train, and the defendant, its agents and servants, owed him the highest degree of care to prevent his injury while in the operation of said train, said degree of care being defined as such as would be used by very cautious, prudent, and competent persons In the same line of business under like or similar circumstances. A failure to use such a high degree of care in the operation of said train so as to prevent injury to plaintiff would be negligence. If you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was injured substantially as alleged by the plaintiff, and that said injury was proximately caused through the negligence of the defendant, you will find for the plaintiff. In this connection you are charged that if you believe that the defendant, its agents or employés, knew or should have known, in the exercise of the care as above defined which the defendant owed, plaintiff was about to leave said car in the discharge of his duty in the usual and customary manner, and that, notwithstanding said knowledge, moved said car while the plaintiff was alighting from the same, and, if you find that the moving of said car was negligence as hereinbefore defined, you will find for the plaintiff, unless you believe that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence in alighting from said car at the time, and in the manner in which he alighted, and that such negligence contributed to plaintiff's injury." The defendant pleaded assumed risk and contributory negligence, and these issues were submitted.

It is unnecessary, we believe, to state a great deal of the testimony, but such as is material to our questions is as follows: Keeling testified to the customary way of taking the mail out on the truck and to the two stops mentioned. "On the occasion of my being injured, I think the truck was placed along side of the train and the mail loaded on it before the train made its final stop. When I went to get out of that car, I had every reason to believe that the car had come to a final stop. The man had come and got the mail, and I supposed that the final stop had been made. This man, Hubbard, who had charge of the truck at the time I was injured, transferred mail for the Missouri, Kansas Texas and for the Houston Texas Central. His duty when the H. T. C. train came into the depot was to take the truck, which was an H. T. C. truck, and take the mail of the H. T. C. train to the M., K. T. train, and, when an M., K. T. train came into the depot, he would take the M., K. T. truck and take the M., K. T. mail to the H. T. C. train. I do not know who employed him. I only know the kind of work he did at the depot." He also testified, as did W. A. Primm: "I never heard any signal or ringing of the bell at the time the train started to move, nor was any warning whatever given." Manning, the engineer, testified for defendant of the two stops, and that on this particular night he had no recollection of having moved the train after they came to the second stop. "We always ring the bell before we move a train at any station.

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Related

Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Keeling
120 S.W. 847 (Texas Supreme Court, 1909)
Houston & Texas Central Railroad v. Keeling
113 S.W. 808 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1908)
Graham v. Sparks
121 S.W. 597 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 108, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-t-c-ry-co-v-keeling-texapp-1911.