Lancaster v. Browder

256 S.W. 905
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1923
DocketNo. 490-3887
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 905 (Lancaster v. Browder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lancaster v. Browder, 256 S.W. 905 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

BLANKS, J.

At a public street or road crossing in. the town of Cordon, containing 600 to 800 inhabitants, Mrs. Julia Browder was on November 24, 1920, struck and killed by a train of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company, operated by ■ plaintiffs in error, Lancaster and Wallace, as receivers.

Suit for damages was instituted in the district court of Palo Pinto county by her surviving husband and children, was submitted to a jury on special issues, and resulted in an apportioned verdict and judgment for $11,001, from which an appeal was prosecuted by the receivers to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme' Judicial District, and the judgment affirmed by that court, 243 S. W. 625, and writ of error has been granted by the Supreme Court.

The facts are concise and uncontradicted. The railroad of plaintiffs in error runs practically east and west through Gordon, and is intersected at right angles a fehort distance east of the depot by the main street of the town, and such intersection was the main public crossing of the town and surrounding community. A few stores and the post office are located on the north side, approximately 150 feet from the track, and other stores, bank, and restaurant oh the south side, some as far as 300 feet removed therefrom, and the residential population apparently about evenly divided in point of numbers by the railroad track.

Among other trains operated by plaintiffs in error through the town was one known as the “Sunshine Special,” a fast train not scheduled to stop at Gordon, and due to pass through the town from the east at about 6 o’clock p. m., but at the time of the accident was about an hour later and running faster than usual to make up time. * Mrs. Browder had been for several years in charge of the post office at Gordon, and was daily accustomed to go about 7 o’clock in the evening from the post office on the north side of the track to collect the mail, necessitating her use of the crossing on her return to the p'ost office. She was necessarily familiar with the schedule of the trains on this railroad and knew the “Sunshine Special” was a fast train and did not stop at Gordon. There was no eyewitness to the accident, and one witness only saw Mrs. Browder in proximity to the track, and he testified that prior to the arrival of the train he gave Mrs. Brow-der some letters to mail at a restaurant about 300 feet south of the track and fronting on the main street, and walked north toward the track about 40 or 50 feet, talking casually with her, when they parted, she going north toward the track and the witness returning to the restaurant. He next saw Mrs. Browder going on to the railroad track, her large Collie dog by her side, and, quoting him:

“I saw the train at the instant I saw Mrs. Browder on the track. The headlight was burning very bright. She was in the glare of the headlight at the moment I saw her on the track. She was walking in a ‘peart gait’; walking as she usually did; she was a fast-walking [906]*906woman. She was walking fast at the moment I saw her. I would estimate the train was something about 100 feet away at that time, something like that, moving at a'rapid rate of speed.”

He then testified that his attention was called from Mrs. Browder to a man and two young ladies driving up in a small ear, and further said:

“At the moment I saw Mrs. Browder on the track with this train approaching, had it been running at its usual and ordinary rate of speed, considering the rate she was traveling, in my opinion she could have cleared the track.”

There was testimony that the train v£as running down grade, and that when so running, made less noise in operation than usual, and that it was difficult to correctly gauge the distance of an oncoming train in the glare of á bright headlight.

Different witnesses estimated the speed of the train through the town at from 35 to SO miles per hour, and variously described its motion as “very rapid,” or “running fast.”

Some three hours after the train had passed, Mrs. Browder’s body was found about 60 feet west and 12 feet north of the track, and the body of the dead Collie dog about 25 feet still further west of Mrs. Browder’s body. Neither of the bodies were mangled, but Mrs. Browder had a wound on the right side of her head, and her right shoulder, arm, hip, and leg were broken, and the letters she was carrying to the post office were scattered along the north side of the track at various intervals from 6 feet west of the crossing up to her body.

The operatives of the train knew nothing apparently about the occurrence, as the train sped on without slackening its speed, and the receivers offered no testimony on the trial of the case.

The jury found that the plaintiffs in error were negligent in failing to sound the whistle for the crossing, in failing to ring the bell while approaching the crossing, and in running the train at a “high or reckless” rate of speed, and also found successively that each several act of negligence above stated was the proximate cause of Mrs. Browder’s death, and in response to further special issues found that Mrs. Browder was “not negligent” in trying to cross the track at the time and place she did, and also that “the negligence, if any, of the deceased in trying to cross the track,” was not the cause of her death.

Upon consideration of the case by the Court of Civil Appeals the findings of the jury that the proximate cause of Mrs. Brow-der’s death was either the failure to sound the whistle or ring the bell, were rejected, upon the ground stated in the opinion that:

“It conclusively appears from the ’ uncontro-verted facts and testimony already recited that Mrs. Browder saw the headlight and knew of the approach of the train before and at the time she went upon the crossing. That being true, it follows conclusively that neither the negligence of the defendants found by the jury in failing to sound the whistle nor the negligence in failing to ring the bell could he held to be the proximate cause of Mrs. Browder’s death, since the only purpose that could have been accomplished by giving such signals would be to warn pedestrians of the approach of the train, a fact which Mrs. Browder knew independent of such signals. H. & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Nixon, 52 Tex. 19.”

But the Court of Civil Appeals finds the jury to have been warranted by the evidence in concluding that the train was being run at a “high or reckless,” rate of speed, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of Mrs. Browder’s death.

We have carefully considered the various authorities referred to in the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals, and are of the opinion that they are not irreconcilable, nor in substantial conflict.

The facts of each case are different, however slight such difference may be; but a single circumstance, inconsequential when considered alone, may be sufficient, when taken in connection with all the other facts and surrounding circumstances, to, in the minds of all reasonable persons,) make negligence appear conclusive, and therefore, a matter of law, or, on the other hand, to create a situation where reasonably minded persons may very properly differ in their conclusions — thus, in the latter case, presenting a question of fact, a jury question strictly, and one in which the determination of the jury must be, and has always been, held conclusive.

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256 S.W. 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-v-browder-texcommnapp-1923.