International & Great Northern Railroad v. Ives

78 S.W. 36, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 49, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 376
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 36 (International & Great Northern Railroad v. Ives) 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
International & Great Northern Railroad v. Ives, 78 S.W. 36, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 49, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 376 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

STREETMAN, Associate Justice.

Appellee recovered judgment for personal injuries sustained at a public crossing on defendant’s railroad. This is the second appeal, a former judgment having been reversed on account of an erroneous charge. International & G. N. Ry. Co. v. Ives, 71 S. W. Rep., 772.

The negligence alleged on the part of appellant was the failure to give the statutory signals for the crossing. The verdict, under the charge of the court, implies a finding that appellant was guilty of the negligence alleged, that appellee was free from contributory negligence, and that appellee was injured to the extent found by the verdict.

The only question made by the assignments of error is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding upon the issue of contributory negligence. It is not claimed that there was error in the manner in which this issue was submitted to the jury, but it is strenuously urged that the evidence was so conclusive as to require the court to give a peremptory charge for defendant upon this issue; or, at least, that the verdict was so clearly against the preponderance of the evidence as to entitle appellant to a new trial.

The accident occurred at about 11 o’clock at night, October 19, 1901. Appellant was alone driving a two-horse wagon along a public road a few miles north or northwest from Austin. Attempting to cross appel *50 lant’s railroad, his horses were struck by a locomotive, drawing a passenger train. He was thrown from the wagon and very seriously injured.

At the place of the accident the railroad runs nearly north and south, and the wagon road runs about east and west, but not exactly at a right angle to the railroad. Appellee was going in a westerly direction, and the train which struck him was going north; so that in approaching the crossing his left side was to the train, but his face would be slightly to the north.

There was no timber on the right of way, but beginning on the east side of it, .and just south of-the wagon road, there was a piece of timbered land, which prevented appellee from seeing down the railroad to the south, until he came within about 120 feet of the track. The track was straight for several hundred yards south of the crossing. There was a switch beginning about .100 feet from the crossing, and extending south several hundred feet. There was a cut which began about 100 feet from the south end of this switch, and extended south several hundred yards. The evidence is conflicting as to the depth of this cut, and as to the height of the dirt which had been taken from it and piled on the sides of the track. Appellant’s witnesses testified that it was not deep enough to have obstructed the view of an approaching train. A witness for appellee, however, testified that “at the north end of the cut, the distance from the rail to the top of the embankment is about seven feet.” There was a mile post, which a map introduced by appellant shows to have been about 1200 feet south of the crossing. The same witness testified that “right at the mile board the cut is about seven feet deep. * * * At the next telegraph post it is about eight feet deep; at the next one about nine feet, and later on about eleven feet high.”

Appellee had only one eye, having lost his left eye. He testified as follows:

“Approaching the crossing that night, I was driving in a jog of a trot. I was sitting on the spring seat on the double bed on the wagon, and driving in a slow jog of a trot. I was driving a pair of good Spanish horses; I was wide awake and duly sober. I had not drank anything stronger than coffee during that day. When 1 first got to the corner of the timber, just sufficient to see the switch to the left, I threw my eye to the left; I could see four or five hundred yards down south on the railroad right of way; when I looked in that direction I didn’t see anything, nor did I hear anything. I was listening, as I was always accustomed to do when it was after night. I was listening for a bell and whistle of the train as it went out, and if I didn’t hear any train, then I expected if it was train time to find it on that switch, but there was nothing on the switch; I saw nothing and heard nothing. I had been in the habit of traveling over that road ever since the road was built. I always understood that the trains had to blow a steam whistle and ring a bell at least eighty steps of a public crossing. I didn’t hear any signal, and when I got to where I could see by the timber and see the *51 end of the switch I looked down at the switch. There was nothing on the switch and I heard nothing. There is a curve some 200 yards north of there, and when the south-bound train comes you can’t see it until it comes around that curve, and I then threw my eye to the right and there was nothing between me and the curve, and about that time I saw the glare of light on the track. When I discovered the light on the track I had proceeded nearly to the track, my horses were within five or six feet of the track, and they saw the train and endeavored to run by, on across the railroad the way they were headed, and the train didn’t look to me to be over sixty or seventy steps or a hundred feet from me at that time. The train was coming from Austin, and it looked to me like it was shot out of a gun, that was my idea of it. 1 threw my weight on the lines and tried to back my horses, but my right-hand horse reared on his hind feet and lunged, and I don’t think I made over two hauls on my line before the cow catcher was under my horse. I thought, well, I’m a dead man. If I turned my lines loose it would throw me right under the engine, and I thought my only show was to back them. I thought if I turned my lines loose they would carry me in front of the engine before I could quit my wagon, but I thought I could back them before the engine passed. The last I recollect was when the cow catcher went under my horses. It threw me with much violence and so high and so far that I never knew where I struck, only what I have been told since.”

If this testimony of appellee was true, we think it can not be doubted that it was sufficient to sustain the finding of the jury that appellee was not guilty- of contributory negligence. It shows that appellee was expecting danger from the north, and that his attention was therefore directed mainly to that point; but it further shows that he did not wholly fail to look to the south. It also shows that he was relying to some extent upon the statutory signals to warn him of the approach of a train from the south; and the finding of the jury, which is not assailed, warrants us in assuming that such signals were not given. Under these circumstances, the verdict ought not to be disturbed, unless the other evidence in the case is sufficient to discredit his testimony, and to show that he did not in fact use the. vigilence to which he testifies. Carraway v. Railway Co., 6 Texas Ct. Rep., 524; Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Fuller, 36 S. W. Rep., 319; Railway Co. v. Slattery, 3 House of Lords Law Rep., p. 1155.

It is insisted, however, that the other facts in evidence do discredit his testimony, and show that if he had looked, as he claimed, he would certainly have discovered the approaching train; and that under the circumstances he must have been either drunk or asleep, or absolutely careless of his own safety in driving upon the crossing.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 36, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 49, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-great-northern-railroad-v-ives-texapp-1903.