International & Great Northern Railroad v. Temple

130 S.W. 850, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 592, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 810
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 18, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 850 (International & Great Northern Railroad v. Temple) 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. Temple, 130 S.W. 850, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 592, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 810 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

— This suit was brought by the appellee' against the appellant railroad company and T. J. Freeman, receiver of said company, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by appellee on September 23, 19Ó7, while in the employment of said company and which it is alleged were caused by thei negligence of a fellow employee engaged with appellee in operating a train on said railroad.

The defendant railroad company answered by general demurrer and general denial, and plea of assumed risk and contributory negligence.

The defendant, Freeman, answered by general demurrer and several special exceptions, and by general denial and pleas of assumed risk and contributory negligence.

The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant railroad company in the sum of $25,000.

The undisputed evidence adduced on the trial establishes the following facts: Appellee at the time of his injury was in the employment of appellant railroad as a hrakeman on a local freight train, and in pursuance of the duties of his employment was engaged in switching or placing cars in the railroad yard at Jacksonville. The train upon which appellee was hrakeman had come into the yard and begun switching operations a short time before appellee was injured. The crew of this train, who were engaged with appellee in doing this switching, were, beside the engineer and fireman, a swing hrakeman, named Melville, and a head hrakeman, named McWhorter. Appellee was the *594 rear or field brakeman. Switching is done by local freight trains in accordance with a “switching list” which is a card showing the switching to be done and is prepared by the station agent. This list is given the swing brakeman and he has full control and directs the movements of trains in placing or switching the cars as indicated by the switching list- before mentioned. The swing brakeman is practically foreman of the crew. The head brakeman follows the engine and throws the switches and repeats signals from the swing brakeman to the engineer. The rear brakeman’s place is at the rear end of the train and when switching is being done he follows the car or cars that are cut off from the train and places them by setting the brakes or blocking them.

There were a number of tracks in this yard, besides the main track, which were designated by numbers and also by special uses to which they are put, such as the “house track” and the “Cotton Belt” track, the former being the track upon which cars were placed to receive or discharge local freight, and the latter being the track on which cars destined to points on the Cotton Belt Railroad were placed.

When appellee’s train arrived in the yard the swing brakeman, Melville, procured the switching list, and while examining it, appellee walked up behind him and asked what the list looked like. Melville replied: “We have a little switching to do down on the south end of the house track. Those three coal cars on Ho. 15 we want to drop them in on the Cotton Belt track when we get through down there, when we get through doing the house track switching down there.”

Following this statement the crew went in on track Ho. 15 and picked up eight or ten cars, including the three coal cars, and then kicked one car on the main line, and blocked it there.

By this time another freight train, bound south, pulled into the yards' and stopped about twelve feet north of the car just blocked on the main line. The swing brakeman then directed appellee to go to the conductor of this freight train and tell him not to move the car on the main line, but that as soon as the crew got through with the work on the house track they would have to drop in three coal cars on the north transfer of the Cotton Belt, and that he would get the car out of the way as soon as he did that. This message was delivered by appellee, and he returned to his crew at work on the house track. Several moves were then made in completing the switching on the house track. The last move was to kick in four or five cars on the extreme south end of this track. The last work done there by appellee was to set some brakes on top of some of these cars. Just as appellee got down from this work his train came back up the main line with a cut of six or eight. cars attached to the engine. The engine was at the south end of the train and was backing along the main line toward the north. At the north end of the train was a box car, and next to that was a stock car, and next to the stock car came the coal cars, to which reference is made above. When the train came back by appellee after he set the brakes on the cars he had just placed on the house track, it was his duty to catch the train and go to his. place on the rear end to be ready to take charge of the next car or cars that might be cut loose. The box car and the stock car before mentioned at the north end of the train passed appellee before he could catch them, but he caught on the *595 north end of the next car, which was one of the coal cars, and passed over to the stock car, the top of which he reached by a ladder at its south end. When he got on top of this car he hurried along to reach the car at the end of the train so that he could set the brakes there when it was cut loose. Just as he reached the end of the stock car and was in the act of stepping from the one car to the other, the box car was cut loose and the speed of the train suddenly slacked, causing the two cars to separate, and appellee fell between the cars and received the injuries of which he complains.'

Dave Melville, witness for defendant, testified that he had been in the train service since 1874 constantly. That he went to work for the International & Great Forthern Eailroad Company the 10th of October, 1896. That he was brakeman on train Fo. 42, north bound, on September 23, 1907, at which time Temple was injured. That they were switching in the yards at Jacksonville at the time that accident occurred. Their train was the first to reach Jacksonville and was doing the switching while the south bound local freight train was waiting for it. That some cars that he had thrown in on the house track rolled back 'and he had to go back and spot them again. That Temple got up to set the brakes — he got up on top of the cars, and they (Melville and the rest of the crew) came back down on the main line. All of the switching had been done except the cars that they wanted for the Cotton Belt transfer track and those going to the T. & F. 0. were about all that they had. That they came down the house track and intended to go on track 15. That they had a car to kick in on that track. That they got out of the house track by pulling south on the main line and then went north up the main line to track Fo. 15. That when they started north he got on the side of the second car from the north end, intending to set one car on Fo. 15 track. That they got to going fast enough to cut it off, and he gave the engineer a signal to stop. About that time he saw Mr. Temple falling, and he gave what is called a “wash out signal” to stop. That after the train stopped he put a chunk under the car (that had been cut loose) and had the engine to back up and then he shoved the car off by hand. When they started north up the main line on the run when Temple was hurt, he got on the side of the car he had designated about seven or eight cars south of the point where Temple was hurt.

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Related

Freeman v. Irving
136 S.W. 810 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 850, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 592, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-great-northern-railroad-v-temple-texapp-1910.