McCan v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

526 S.W.2d 754, 1975 Tex. App. LEXIS 3026
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 1975
Docket987
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 526 S.W.2d 754 (McCan v. Missouri Pacific Railroad) 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
McCan v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 526 S.W.2d 754, 1975 Tex. App. LEXIS 3026 (Tex. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

NYE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction. Plaintiff Missouri Pacific Railroad Company sought injunctive relief against the defendants, seeking the use of two specific tracts of land, belonging to defendants, for salvage and rebuilding operations of their trestle and derailed railroad cars, and further seeking to restrain defendants from interfering with the Railroad’s use of defendants’ land while such salvage and rebuilding operations were in progress. The trial court granted a prohibitory injunction, and other relief. The injunction expired fifteen days later by its own terms. The defendants have perfected their appeal from the orders of the trial court.

The plaintiff Missouri Pacific Railroad Company (hereafter referred to as Railroad) operated a main line which runs from Houston to Brownsville, Texas, which crosses Victoria County and other surrounding areas. The line runs across the defendants’ ranch (called the McFaddin Ranch) on which the Railroad has a one hundred (100) foot right-of-way, fifty feet on each side of the center line of the railroad trades.

On March 19,1975, at approximately 5:45 o’clock p. m., a bridge located over the Guadalupe River on the defendants’ ranch collapsed resulting in the derailment of eighteen of the Railroad’s approximately 123 freight cars. The train had originated in Houston and was going to Brownsville, Texas.

According to the testimony of the engineer of the freight train in question, he noticed a small amount of smoke coming up between the ties near the south end of the bridge as his train approached the bridge. As he got more or less directly over the area where the smoke was rising, he saw a fire and small flames down below the ledge of the deck of the bridge. The engineer radioed to the caboose, informing the crew of what he had discovered.

The engineer decided to continue his train on south, as he was already over the fire, and pull the rear end of the train just south and past the fire, and stop the train so that the crew members on the rear of the train could extinguish the fire. After proceeding forward, the engineer stopped too soon leaving two cars, the caboose and the car next to the caboose, still over the bridge where the fire was.

The crew in the caboose notified the engineer of the position of the last two cars. The engineer then attempted to take up *756 slack and proceed on south far enough so that the caboose would clear the bridge and the fire. Because the train was on an ascending grade and because of the tonnage he had in his train, the engineer was unable to make the train go forward. The engineer then decided that he would make a reverse movement, or back the train approximately half of the train length and then make a run at the ascending grade. When the engineer backed up the train, it was necessary to come to a stop before again proceeding forward. This made necessary the application of the air brakes on the train. There was some two to three minutes delay in the brakes releasing on all of the cars before the engineer could start a south forward movement again. When the engineer attempted to move forward, the air hose, that is used to connect each freight car to the braking system, on one of the cars sitting on the bridge, caught fire and melted, causing an air leak resulting in the brakes locking on the entire train. The train in this condition was unable to move either forward or backward.

Covering the bridge at that time were some eighteen railroad hopper cars located approximately in the middle of the train. The fire got worse to the point that the bridge collapsed causing the eighteen railroad hopper cars to fall to the side of the collapsed bridge. All the railroad cars landed within the plaintiff’s right-of-way area. Salvage operations were begun almost immediately thereafter by the Railroad.

It was determined by the Railroad that salvage of the hopper cars and the repair of the bridge could be done more expeditiously by the use of defendants’ land adjacent to the bridge area. The Railroad then attempted to get permission from defendants for the use of a certain amount of defendants’ land in order to get salvage and bridge building equipment to the derailment scene. During the negotiations, the defendants agreed to the Railroad’s use of defendants’ land and roads but only if the Railroad would agree to certain conditions, those being: 1) to pay all back claims for damages that the defendants had against Railroad (this was for cattle that were killed on the railroad right-of-way); 2) rebuild the fences along both sides of the Railroad’s right-of-way, which consisted of approximately ten to twelve miles on each side; and 8) agree to build a spur track called for in an original right-of-way agreement. The Railroad refused and began salvage operations anyway which included moving the derailed cars off the Railroad’s right-of-way onto the defendants’ land. This was done, according to the testimony, so that the repairs to the bridge could be done in a more efficient and convenient manner.

Shortly thereafter, on March 20, 1975, some of defendants’ employees approached the salvage and rebuilding site and instructed the Railroad’s employees to get off and stay off their property, and to remove their cars, scrap rail and tracks off the defendants’ property and back onto their own right-of-way. Defendants’ employees ordered the Railroad’s employees not to come on their property again. The defendants’ employees were armed with guns at that time.

The next day, the Railroad sought injunc-tive relief seeking court permission to use two tracts of land belonging to defendants for their salvage and rebuilding operations. Additionally, the Railroad sought a temporary restraining order, restraining defendants from interfering with the Railroad’s salvage and rebuilding operations. The two tracts of land requested by the Railroad were a 400' by 100' area immediately west of the Railroad’s bridge and right-of-way and a 600' by 30' area immediately south of the property. Both of the tracts are located on the McFaddin Ranch, defendants’ property. The trial court granted the temporary restraining order on March 21,1975, to be effective until March 26, 1975, at which time a hearing was set for defendants to show cause, if any, why a temporary injunction should not issue against them.

*757 On March 81, 1975, after an evidentiary hearing, an order granting an injunction was entered by the trial court. The order enjoined and restrained the defendants from interfering with the Railroad’s salvage and rebuilding operations and it granted to the Railroad the use of defendants’ property for such operation. The injunction was to expire by its own terms on April 12, 1975, at midnight. In addition to the injunctive relief ordered, the trial court ordered the Railroad to pay to defendants the sum of $2,200.00 for all back claims for cattle killed by the Railroad on its right-of-way through the McFaddin Ranch. The trial court further ordered that a commission be appointed to assess damages, if any, to the surface of defendants’ land and ordered the Railroad to pay the sum so assessed by the commissioners as damages, if any, to the defendants. From that judgment, defendants have perfected their appeal to this Court.

The defendants bring forward three points of error on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
526 S.W.2d 754, 1975 Tex. App. LEXIS 3026, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccan-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-texapp-1975.