in the Matter of M. M., Jr., a Juvenile

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 2012
Docket13-12-00545-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Matter of M. M., Jr., a Juvenile (in the Matter of M. M., Jr., a Juvenile) 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.

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in the Matter of M. M., Jr., a Juvenile, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-10-00546-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

BNSF RAILWAY COMPANY, Appellant,

v.

CARLOS DONAWAY, Appellee.

On appeal from the 9th District Court of Montgomery County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Garza Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez In this railroad accident case, appellant BNSF Railway Company challenges the

jury's verdict in favor of appellee Carlos Donaway. Donaway, an engineer for the

railway, sued BNSF for injuries he alleges he sustained as a result of a collision between

a locomotive he was driving and a set of standing railcars. By four issues, which we

consolidate and address as three, BNSF disputes the trial court's charge to the jury on the "Radio Rule," which governs the communications used in shoving, backing, or pushing

movements by trains, see 49 C.F.R. § 220.49 (2012); the trial court's failure to include an

aggravation of injury instruction in the jury charge; and the evidence supporting the jury's

award of past lost earning capacity. We affirm.

I. Background1

On March 18, 2009, Donaway was involved in an accidental collision at the Beach

Siding rail yard in Conroe, Texas. Donaway and two other BNSF

employees—conductor Robert Gaines and brakeman Patrick Horn—were picking up

several railcars to take to another location. To pick up the standing railcars, the

three-man crew used two locomotives coupled together. Donaway rode the east-facing

locomotive that was travelling backward toward the standing railcars; Gaines rode the

west-facing locomotive that was travelling forward toward the standing railcars.

Donaway, as engineer, was responsible for driving the locomotives; Gaines, as

conductor, was responsible for giving Donaway directions to the standing railcars as

Donaway was driving blind from where he sat in his backward-traveling locomotive.

Donaway approached the standing railcars from the east, driving the locomotives west.

He had to back the locomotives through a railroad crossing to reach the standing railcars.

As the locomotives approached the crossing, Gaines gave Donaway directions

over the radio in the form of "car counts." A car count is a unit of measurement

communicated by conductors to engineers to aid the engineer in backing operations.

For example, if a conductor informs an engineer that he is ten cars from a crossing, the

1 This case is before the Court on transfer from the Ninth Court of Appeals in Beaumont pursuant to a docket equalization order issued by the Supreme Court of Texas. See TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2005). 2 engineer knows that the locomotive is ten car-lengths from the crossing. Because rail

cars are approximately fifty feet in length, the engineer knows that the locomotive is

approximately 500 feet from the crossing.

Gaines began the backing operation riding outside the cab of his locomotive.

While riding outside the cab, Gaines radioed to Donaway over his handset that the

locomotive was twenty to twenty-five cars from the crossing. When his handset began

malfunctioning, Gaines moved inside the cab, turned off his handset, and continued to

give Donaway car counts from the cab radio. From the cab radio, Gaines gave Donaway

three more counts: ten cars to the crossing; six cars to the crossing; and finally, three

cars to the crossing. When the locomotives reached the crossing, Gaines blew the

train's whistle and then moved back outside the cab. From outside the cab, Gaines

began giving Donaway further car counts on the other side of the crossing, but Donaway

did not hear these counts because Gaines had not turned his handset back on.

It is undisputed that the last car count Donaway heard was the "three to the

crossing" count and then heard Gaines blow the train's whistle, signaling that they were

passing the crossing. After the last car count and whistle, Donaway continued to back

the locomotives, continuing on the west side of the crossing and eventually colliding with

the standing railcars.

Donaway filed suit against BNSF, claiming that he injured his neck in the collision.

Donaway claimed that BNSF was negligent for leaving the standing railcars too close to

the crossing and was liable for Gaines's violation of the Radio Rule. The case was tried

to a jury.

After the close of evidence, BNSF moved for a directed verdict, arguing that, as a

3 matter of law: Gaines could not have violated the Radio Rule because it only applied to

engineers2; and the evidence showed that Donaway violated the rule. The trial court

denied BNSF's motion. At the charge conference, BNSF objected to the inclusion of a

question asking the jury whether both Donoway and Gaines violated the Radio Rule; the

trial court included the Radio Rule question as to both Donaway and Gaines.

At the charge conference, BNSF also requested that an instruction be included in

the charge instructing the jury that it could not include damages for any condition suffered

by Donaway before the collision unless the condition was aggravated by the collision.

Donaway did not object to the aggravation instruction, and the trial court allowed it. But

when the trial court was reading its charge to the jury, it became apparent that the

aggravation instruction had not been included in the charge; the charge included a

pre-existing condition instruction that the parties had discussed earlier in their charge

negotiations before settling on the aggravation instruction. 3 BNSF objected to the

missing aggravation instruction, but the trial court overruled BNSF's objection and

refused to include the instruction. Instead, in the charge it gave to the jury, the trial court

made a handwritten strikeout through the pre-existing condition instruction.

In the trial court's charge, the jury was asked whose negligence caused the

collision; the jury answered that both BNSF and Donaway's negligence were the legal

causes. The jury was then asked whether either Gaines or Donaway violated the Radio

Rule; the jury answered that only Gaines violated the Radio Rule. The jury then

answered that Gaines's violation of the Radio Rule was a legal cause of the collision.

2 BNSF also moved for partial summary judgment on this basis. 3 The pre-existing condition instruction read as follows: "Do not include any amount for any condition existing before the occurrence in question." 4 Next, the jury was given a proportionate liability question; it answered that BNSF was

ninety percent responsible for the collision and that Donaway was ten percent

responsible. Finally, the jury awarded damages totaling $810,000: $114,000 for past

lost earning capacity; $456,000 for future lost earning capacity; $70,000 for past physical

pain and mental anguish; $20,000 for future physical pain and mental anguish; $45,000

for medical expenses; $40,000 for past physical impairment; and $65,000 for future

physical impairment.

BNSF moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the basis that: as a

matter of law, Gaines could not violate the Radio Rule as it only applied to engineers; and

the jury's $114,000 award for past lost earning capacity was unsupported by the

evidence.

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