Jimmy Ray Roberson Jr. and Misty Roberson v. Union Pacific Railroad Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 2018
Docket09-16-00392-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jimmy Ray Roberson Jr. and Misty Roberson v. Union Pacific Railroad Company (Jimmy Ray Roberson Jr. and Misty Roberson v. Union Pacific Railroad Company) 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
Jimmy Ray Roberson Jr. and Misty Roberson v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ________________ NO. 09-16-00392-CV ________________

JIMMY RAY ROBERSON JR. AND MISTY ROBERSON, Appellants

V.

UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 60th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. B-194,123 ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Jimmy Ray Roberson Jr. and Misty Roberson1 appeal the trial court’s

judgment following a jury trial. In four appellate issues, the Robersons challenge the

trial judge’s overruling of their motion for new trial, in which they alleged that the

evidence conclusively established that Union Pacific’s negligence was a proximate

1 When referring to appellants individually, we will refer to Jimmy as “Roberson” and to Misty by her first name. 1 cause of the accident and that Jimmy’s negligence was not. We affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The Robersons filed suit against Union Pacific Railroad Company (“Union

Pacific”), alleging that Jimmy was severely injured when a tractor-trailer owned by

T and D Solutions, LLC (“T & D”) was struck by a Union Pacific train.2 The

Robersons asserted that Jimmy was in the driver’s seat of the tractor-trailer, which

was positioned across the train tracks at the time of the collision. The Robersons

contended that Union Pacific, as well as Union Pacific’s engineer and conductor,

were negligent and grossly negligent, and that their negligence proximately caused

Jimmy’s injuries and damages. In addition, the Robersons alleged that Union Pacific

acted intentionally by instructing its engineers to ignore written safety rules to keep

on schedule and to assume that obstructions on the tracks will move. Misty asserted

claims for loss of consortium, loss of household services, and mental anguish.

2 The case began as a lawsuit by the surviving family members and the estate of Robert Grant, Roberson’s co-worker who was killed in the accident. Jimmy Roberson was named as a defendant in that lawsuit, along with Union Pacific and other defendants. The Robersons asserted a cross-claim against Union Pacific and other parties. The Robersons state in their brief that the portion of the case involving Grant settled, and the instant case involved the Robersons as plaintiffs and Union Pacific as the defendant. 2 James Carter, Union Pacific’s corporate representative, testified that the

accident occurred on February 19, 2013, at approximately 8:00 a.m. Carter explained

that the crash involved a collision between a low-boy trailer that was carrying a crane

and Union Pacific’s “consist” that contained five locomotives. According to Carter,

the consist was being operated by two Union Pacific employees: engineer Leroy

Price and conductor L.V. McQueen Jr. Carter testified that the tractor-trailer was

stopped at the grade crossing approximately fifty-three seconds before the consist

struck it. Carter stated that Price should know the approximate required stopping

distance in both normal and emergency braking situations. Carter testified that the

“entire stretch” a few miles back from the crash site, was straight and flat, and the

engineer and conductor had an unobstructed view as they proceeded down the tracks.

In addition, Carter explained that the weather was good on the day of the crash, and

Price should have been able to see at least one mile down the tracks.

According to Carter, on the day of the accident, Price and McQueen were

operating the locomotive at approximately fifty-nine miles per hour, and the

locomotive’s speed at the time of the impact was fifty-seven miles per hour. Carter

opined that Price and McQueen probably could have seen Roberson’s trailer, but the

tractor would have been hidden by the trees.

3 Carter explained that Union Pacific operates under a General Code of

Operating Rules (“GCOR”), which are divided by craft and govern all employees,

including Price and McQueen. Carter testified that one of the purposes of the GCOR

is to prevent injuries and fatalities to the general public, and he explained that the

rules must always be in writing. According to Carter, the GCOR requires employees

to exercise vigilant lookout, observe what is in their field of vision, and to respond

without hesitation. Carter explained that the GCOR also require that in case of any

doubt or uncertainty, an employee must take the safe course of action without

hesitation. Carter testified that the GCOR applied to Price and McQueen during the

entire fifty-three seconds they were able to see the tractor-trailer on the tracks. In

addition, Carter testified that one of the GCOR instructs engineers and conductors

to operate efficiently and to avoid unnecessary delays.

Carter stated that engineers are not specifically taught not to stop or slow

down until they are certain that a car on the crossing will not move, but Union Pacific

does teach engineers to assume that a vehicle will move “[o]utside any warning that

it’s not go[ing to] move or it’s disabled[.]” Carter testified that vehicles that remain

stopped on the tracks have approximately an eighty percent chance of being struck

by an approaching Union Pacific locomotive. Carter explained that rules in the

GCOR require application of the emergency brake when doing so is necessary to

4 protect life or property, and to use the maximum braking effort available that is

consistent with safe train handling techniques. Carter testified that the Federal

Railroad Administration (“FRA”) maintained that “‘[t]he physical properties of a

moving train virtually always prevent it from stopping in time to avoid hitting an

object on the track, regardless of the speed which the train is traveling.’”

According to Carter, “[t]here’s no way to pull up the data of how many

collisions at a crossing the engineer has been involved in.” Carter explained that

Union Pacific does not maintain databases regarding the work history of particular

employees as to collisions, and he stated that the FRA does not require that such

records be kept. According to Carter, operating practices inspectors and other

individuals from FRA “ride with us, . . . evaluating our practices, our track structure,

[and] our signal structure.” Carter testified that Price’s previous involvement in

accidents involving fatalities could potentially affect Price’s ability to safely perform

his job.3 According to Carter, Price was evaluated by many people before he was

permitted to operate a locomotive again.

Carter agreed that if the emergency brake had been applied between 1700 and

2100 feet away, there would have been in time to avoid injury, death, and property

3 During examination of Carter, the Robersons’ counsel read into the record a portion of Price’s deposition testimony, in which Price testified that he had been involved in three previous accidents involving fatalities. 5 loss. Carter testified that the locomotive’s data recorder shows that four seconds after

the tractor-trailer stopped on the tracks, the train’s speed increased from fifty-eight

to fifty-nine miles per hour. The parties stipulated that as the train approached the

crossing, the engineer blew the horn in compliance with applicable regulations, the

loudness of the horn complied with applicable regulations, and the background noise

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