Missouri-Kan.-Tex. R. Co. of v. McLain

74 S.W.2d 166, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 802
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 12, 1934
DocketNo. 3018.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 S.W.2d 166 (Missouri-Kan.-Tex. R. Co. of v. McLain) 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-Kan.-Tex. R. Co. of v. McLain, 74 S.W.2d 166, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 802 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

WALTHALL, Justice.

Mrs. Annie E. McLain, surviving widow of Charles M. McLain, as plaintiff, brought this *167 suit for herself and on behalf of two surviving children of her family, naming them, against defendant, Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company of Texas, to recover damages which she alleges she and said children sustained by reason of the alleged negligent acts of defendant proximately causing the death of her said husband. The damages sued for were the sum of $12,000, and plaintiff prayed that such sum as she Inay recover be apportioned between plaintiff and her said children.

A better understanding of the issues pleaded and submitted to and found by the jury will be had by a brief statement of some of the uncontroverted facts which occurred immediately preceding the death of Charles M. McLain on account of whose death this suit is brought.

His death occurred on the early morning of January 11, 1931. Prior to his death the deceased had been employed during the night of his death, and on the occasion of his death he was returning from his place of work to or in the direction of his residence in the city of Dallas, and was walking southerly on Green-ville avenue. When deceased reached the place where the defendant’s railroad track crosses Greenville avenue, defendant’s freight train, consisting of an engine and some thirty-six cars, had stopped and some cars of said freight train stood across and blocked the crossing of Greenville avenue. While the deceased was on Greenville avenue at said railroad crossing and while the said freight train was still standing across said crossing, a Mr. Wilmeth, driving an automobile on Green-ville avenue, approached said railroad crossing on the side where the deceased was and in undertaking to make a quick and sudden stop his automobile skidded on the wet paved street and came in contact with one of the cars of the freight train standing on the said street. 'Plaintiff’s allegation is that in skidding, and in the collision of the automobile with the standing freight car, the automobile struck the deceased with such force and violence and in such manner as to catch deceased between the said automobile and the standing freight car, and crushed deceased’s body between the automobile and the freight ear and thereby produced his death. No person saw the deceased at the time he was killed, and not until after the collision of the automobile with the freight car was it known that deceased was injured, when his body was discovered on the paved street in its position, condition, and at the place shown by the evidence.

The issues between plaintiff and the defendant railroad company are sufficiently indicated by the special charge of the trial court in submitting the case to the jury.

The issues submitted and the jury’s findings thereon are substantially as follows:

All the issues were submitted to be found on a preponderance of the evidence.

(1)-Mr. Wilmeth lost control of his automobile as he approached the railway track.

(2) After Wilmeth lost control of his automobile' it came in contact with Mr. McLain.

(3) At the time Wilmeth lost control of his automobile McLain was on either the paved or unpaved portion of the public highway with a view of crossing to the other side of the railway track when it was clear.

(4) The’train in question was stopped across the highway prior to the time Wilmeth first discovered it.

(5 and 6) The railway employees responsible therefor were negligent in stopping said train across the highway on said occasion, and'said negligence was a proximate cause of the death of McLain.

(7) After the train was stopped across the highway there was time before Wilmeth lost control of his automobile to remove the obstructing cars from the highway by cutting the crossing.

(8 and 9) The train crew were negligent in failing to remove the obstructing cars from the highway by cutting the crossing before ' Wilmeth lost control of his automobile, and such negligence was a proximate cause of the death of McLain.

(19 and 11) The defendant, acting through its train crew, was negligent in failing to have some one of their number with a lantern on the north side of the track at said crossing at the time Wilmeth approached the track, so’ as thereby to attempt to warn the traveling public which might approach the track from the north of the presence of said cars across said highway, and such negligence was a proximate cause of the death of Mc-Lain. »

(12 and 13) Defendant was negligent in failing to install, prior to the date of McLain’s death, a light at such crossing to aid travelers from the north in observing whether a train obstructed the highway, and such negligence was a proximate cause of the death of Mc-Lain.

(14 and 14-A) The death of McLain- was an unavoidable accident as to Wilmeth, but not as to defendant.

*168 (15 and 16) Wilmeth, as be approached the crossing in question, under the conditions and circumstances then and there existing, as shown by the evidence, drove at such rate of speed that he was unable to stop his automobile and avoid striking the train in question, after same became visible to him by the headlights of his automobile and driving at such rate of speed was not negligence.

(17) Conditional and not answered.

(18 and 19) Deceased did not fail to use that degree of care for his own safety that a reasonably prudent person under like or similar circumstances would have used, if any, to discover the approach of the automobile, and to avoid being struck by the automobile.

(21 and 22) The crossing in question was willfully blocked by the train in question by standing thereon for a period of more than five minutes next before it was struck by the automobile of Wilmeth, and such blocking by the train was a proximate cause of the death of McDain.

(23) The jury found for plaintiff in the sum of $12,000.

The trial court recited in the judgment that it appearing from the undisputed evidence that plaintiff, Mrs. McDain, had heretofore received from cross-defendant Wilmeth the sum of $2,000, same should be credited upon the verdict; and that it further appeared that Wilmeth had filed herein a motion for judgment in his favor, the court thereupon entered judgment for plaintiff and against defendant railroad company in the sum of $10,000.

We might state here that Mrs. McDain presents a cross-assignment of error in allowing the $2,000 previously paid in her settlement with Wilmeth as a credit upon the amount assessed by the jury. The court overruled the defendant's, railroad company’ST'ámended motion for .arfew-tfial, aná the defeagant duly prosecutes this"appeal.

Opinion.

Appellant, by its first two propositions, challenges the sufficiency of tne evidence to raise the issue whether deceased was killed by being caught between the automobile and appellant’s train, as alleged by appellee, and because of the insufficiency of the evidence to show such fact the court should have given appellees’ requested peremptory charge in its favor.

There was no eyewitness to what caused the death of McDain.

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74 S.W.2d 166, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-kan-tex-r-co-of-v-mclain-texapp-1934.