Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Sadler

149 S.W. 1188, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 770
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 1188 (Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Sadler) 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
Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Sadler, 149 S.W. 1188, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 770 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

RASBURX, J.

This is an appeal entered upon the verdict of the jury awarding ap-pellee $6,750 damages in compensation for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him while in the performance of his duties as switchman for appellant at Ray yards, in Denison, Tex. Appellee, in substance, charged that it was his duty as a switchman to ride cars and “strings” of cars over the tracks of appellant, and that while so engaged he received the injuries alleged, and that same were due to the negligence of the appellant’s engineer in suddenly and with unusual violence stopping the train of cars which appellee was riding and thereby precipitating him from same; and due .as well to the failure of the pin puller employed by appellant to notify ap-pellee of his failure to cut off or uncouple the “string” of cars which he was riding, in order that he might be prepared for the consequent shock and accordingly protect himself. Appellant pleaded the general denial, assumed risk, and contributory negligence, in that appellee did not stand at the proper place and in the proper position on the car at the time he received his injuries; for that appellee stood near the end, instead of in the middle, of the car, and was not holding to anything to prevent himself from being thrown from the car by the jars and jerks alleged, and that such jars and jerks frequently occurred in switching, and that appellee should have anticipated same, but negligently failed to take any precaution to guard against such conditions.

[1] By numerous assignments of error, appellant first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the charge that the engineer stopped his engine and the cars attached thereto in a negligent manner, and, if he did, that such act was the proximate cause of appellee’s injury; and also that the evidence fails to sustain the charge that the “pin puller” was guilty of negligence when he neglected to notify appellee that he had failed to uncouple the “string” of cars, and, if he did, that such failure was the proximate cause of appellee’s injuries.

It appears from the testimony that appellant maintains certain switch “yards” at Denison, which are used for the purpose of dividing and making up its freight trains preliminary to sending same out over its road. The making up of trains is done with a switch engine manned by the engineer and fireman, assisted by a switch foreman, a pin puller, a switch tender, and such number of switchmen or “jockeys,” as they are termed, as the occasion demands. It is the duty of the switch foreman to direct the pin puller and the switch tender upon which particular track each ear from the train is to be placed. It is then the duty of the switch tender to connect the main or lead track with the switch track upon which the car or cars are to be placed. It is then the *1189 duty of the pin puller to notify the switch-man or jockey who is upon the string of ears how many cars he is going to ride, and onto which track they are going to be shunted. When the switchman is so notified, the pin puller then signals the engineer to start the train, and to give the cars such momentum as will roll them off the main or lead track onto the switch track for which they are intended, and as far thereon as desired. When the cars have acquired sufficient momentum to carry them to the desired spot, it is the duty of the pin puller to “lift” or “pull” the pin, thereby uncoupling the desired number of cars from the balance of the train and permitting them to roll onto the switch track in charge of the switchman. When so uncoupled, the switchman’s duty is to ride the car or cars to their destination, setting the brakes, etc., and in general controlling the car or cars after same are uncoupled or detached from the engine and other cars, as the case may be. Appellee was a switchman or “jockey,” and had been told by the pin puller that he was going to give appellee a “bunch” of cars to ride to track No. 3. After receiving such instructions, appellee took a position on the front car of the bunch which he was to ride, bracing himself thereon by “spraddling” his legs, set the brakes on the car, and stood thus in readiness to stop the bunch before they could collide with other cars at the end of switch track No. 3. The pin puller, whose duty it was to uncouple the bunch of cars that appellee was riding and permit same, by their own momentum, to continue on over switch track No. 3, failed or neglected to make the uncoupling, and thereupon signaled the engineer to stop the train, which he did, and as a result of which appellee was thrown a distance of 12 feet over the end of his car to the tracks below and injured as alleged. As stated, appellee alleged that when the pin puller failed or neglected to pull the pin and uncouple the cars it was his duty to notify appellee of the fact, in order that appellee might have warning that his cars would not roll on down the track, but would be stopped and thereby jerked, and that the pin puller was negligent in not so warning appellee; also that the engineer operating the switch engine which was pushing the cars, when he stopped same in response to the pin puller’s signal did so with unnecessary and unusual suddenness, which act resulted in an unusual and unnecessary jar and jolt, and which, in law, constituted negligence.

Appellee testified: “After the pin puller had failed to pull the pin and make the cut, as he told me he was going to, it was the custom of the pin puller to give as easy a stop signal as he could to the engineer working the switch engine; then to notify the man on the top to look out. I was not given any notice to look out. I was the man on top. I said it was customary to notify the man on top of the car. He would halloa, ‘Look out up there” He would notify him by halloaing at him. I don’t know when I learned that custom. I have known it for quite a while. That was the custom in Ray yards, and I knew it. He would halloa, ‘Look out,’ if he didn’t make the cut, or something was wrong. That whole thing about stopping the engine the way I would stop it, and about notifying the man on top of the ear, was the customary way of doing out there in Ray yards, and I had known it all the time while I had been there. Well, then, as we were shoving in, the cars kept getting faster and faster, and I went and took up the slack in the brake chain. Then all at once I heard the slack coming, and then I braced myself, and the next thing I knew I was going on over the top of the brake staff wheel towards the ground. I went over the end of the car. * * * I understood that they were going to cut off some of those cars from the rear end that I was to ride down. I thought they were cut off. As a matter of fact, they were not. A sudden stop of the engine and a slack running out of the cars was what threw me off the car; the sudden stopping of the entire string of cars. * * * That string of cars was going at least eight or ten miles an hour down there when it threw me off. When the car I was on stopped, it was a sudden stop. * * * I said that my car stopped very suddenly. * * * I was back about 10 or 12 feet from the east end of the car when I went over. The east end was the front end, the way they were shoving. I went over the end of the car when it stopped — east end. A switchman can lie down and hold on and protect himself from being jerked off the top of cars, if he knows that they are going to stop as they did in this ease. I was 10 or 12 feet from the end, I judge, maybe more, when I heard that coming. When I heard' it [slack] coming, I braced myself. I spraddled my legs out this way to stand the jar of the car. I was then 10 or 12 feet from the end of theicar.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 1188, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-k-t-ry-co-of-texas-v-sadler-texapp-1912.