International & Great Northern Railroad v. Moore

41 S.W. 70, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 51, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 S.W. 70 (International & Great Northern Railroad v. Moore) 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. Moore, 41 S.W. 70, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 51, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 156 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

' PLEASANTS,

Associate Justice.—This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the District Court of Galveston County in favor of appellee for $3700 damages for personal injuries sustained while employed as brakeman upon appellant’s road, through the alleged negligence of the engineer of the train.

The appellee was head brakeman upon a freight train of appellant. The train, just after it had passed over a descending grade, and but a *52 short distance from the foot of the grade, and just after the front brakes, but before the rear brakes, and those attached to the hindermost car, had been released, collided with a cow, and by the collision the engine was forced from the rails upon the ties, and after running for some distance over the ties was thrown entirely upon the roadbed and was capsized, and thereby the appellee, who was upon the engine at the time and unable to escape therefrom, was injured. The engineer and fireman escaped injury by leaping from the engine before it was overturned. The appellee, after releasing the brakes, which he had applied to the train when it reached the descending grade, went forward, passing over some five or six intervening cars, to the engine, and did not know or suspect that there was anything wrong with the train, he says, until he stepped upon the engine, when, by its motion, he immediately discovered that it was off the rails and running across the ties; and in an effort to leap from the train, one of his feet was caught between the engine and tank, and he was held fast until the engine was capsized. ¡No danger signal was given by the engineer, as is usual when cattle are discovered upon the track in front of the train, though appellee admits he saw the animal upon the track, but he says he did not know when he started forward that the train had struck the animal. He supposed, from the fact that the engineer did not give the danger signal, all was well with the train, otherwise he would not have gone on the engine; that he was misled by the fail ore of the engineer to signal for the brakes.

The engineer, while in the window of the engine from which he leaped from the train, saw the appellee, and states there was nothing to obstruct the view of the latter; and to 'the same effect is the testimony of the fireman. Appellee states that there was a heavy volume of smoke blowing low over the train in front of him, which obstructed his vision as he was approaching the engine. Appellee had been following the vocation of a brakeman since 1889, but had been in the employment of the appellant only about one month at the time of his injury, and was not familiar with the road or the stations thereon; and as the conductor and the engineer, as he says, but the fact is denied by them, had received instructions or orders in reference to the running of the train, at the station last passed before the accident, his purpose in going on the engine, after releasing the brakes, was to inquire of the engineer what their instructions were. Appellee says he was working for appellant under the rules promulgated by it, and which were in force at the time of his injury. These rules, among other things, declare:

“(1) That all trains are run under the direction of the conductors, except when their directions conflict with the rules, or involve risk, in which case the engineer will be held equally responsible. (2) That freight conductors will be held responsible for the faithful performance of duty required on the part of their brakemen. (3) Conductors of all trains, when approaching a meeting point where they are to take the siding, must go to the forward part of the train and attend to the switch in person. Upon leaving the siding they must set up the switch for the *53 main track, in person, and such, duty conductors can not assign to anyone, but must perform it in person in every instance. (4) Engineers having for any cause to stop between stations, or at any place where flagmen should be sent to protect rear end of train, must, before stopping, signal flagman out by giving five short blasts of the whistle, and before starting again, must call flagman in by four long blasts of the whistle/”

From these rules it would seem that all of the train men, including the engineer, are subject to the order of the conductor while running the train; and the engineer is under obligations, as are all of the other members of the train crew, to obey the conductor, unless his orders are in violation of the rules of the company, or unless they involve risk. And it appears that there is no rule of the company which gives authority to the engineer of the train to superintend, control, command, or direct either of the brakemen. The appellee, however, testified in substance that when the train was running the engineer had, in his opinion, equal control and authority with the conductor over the brakemen; and that the engineer did give orders to the brakemen, and that it was the duty of the latter to obey the orders of the engineer; but in this he was contradicted by both the engineer and conductor, who declared that the engineer had no authority to superintend, command, order, or direct the brakemen.

The appellee testified further, that in going forward to ask the engineer if he had any orders for him, he was acting under the rules of the company, and he believed he was discharging his duty in so doing; but appellee admitted that if he had remained upon the cars, if the engineer had had any instructions or orders to give him, he would have signaled him to come to the engine. Again, the appellee testified: “When the train is running, it is the duty of the conductor to direct the train crew when he can get close enough to them; if.not, it devolves upon the engineer to direct the train men in the performance' of their duties. I do not know whether the rules of the defendant company touch upon that point, but it is the custom upon every road I ever Avorked upon.” In answer to counsel for defendant, appellee admitted that at the time of the accident by which he Avas injured, a rule of the defendant company declared that all trains should be run under the direction of the conductors, except when their orders conflicted Avith the rules or involve risk.

The conductor testified for defendant, that the duties of the fore-brakeman did not require him to go upon the engine, unless called there by signal from the engineer; and he further testified that the engineer did not have the superintendence or the control of either brakeman, nor did he have the authority to order or direct either brakeman. The other brakeman, J. S. Wilson, testified that there was no duty upon the head brakeman requiring him to leave his brakes on top of the cars to go to the engine to learn his duties from the engineer; that it was his duty to inquire of the conductor as to his duties. That the engineer gave orders by signals when he is running the train. The engineer may tell' the brakeman to open switches, and when he tells us we obey him, but *54 we are not under duty to obey him. When I am head brakeman and have a long train, and the conductor is back in the caboose, and the rear brakeman also, and I am within a car’s length of the engineer, I take my orders from him, as he has the same running orders as the conductor; and if the engineer tells me to open a switch to let him pass on the sidetrack, I do it; but it is not my duty to do it.

Shubert, the fireman, testified that the conductor had the control and direction of the train crew.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W. 70, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 51, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-great-northern-railroad-v-moore-texapp-1897.