Missouri-Kansas-Texas R. Co. of Texas v. Barnaby

167 S.W.2d 235
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1942
DocketNo. 2416
StatusPublished

This text of 167 S.W.2d 235 (Missouri-Kansas-Texas R. Co. of Texas v. Barnaby) 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-Kansas-Texas R. Co. of Texas v. Barnaby, 167 S.W.2d 235 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

RICE, Chief Justice.

This is a suit for damages brought by the surviving widow, and other members of the family of C. L. Barnaby, against the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company of Texas, because of the death of C. L. Barnaby while an employee of defendant. Mr. Barnaby had been in the service of the defendant on its Texas Central branch, in the capacity of locomotive engineer, for about thirty years. The tragedy occurred a few miles west of Walnut Springs, in McLennan county, Texas, on April 1, 1938, while Mr. Barnaby was at the throttle of his engine proceeding east with his freight train from DeLeon to Waco. As the engine entered the west end of the railroad bridge over East Bosque River, the left side of Mr. Barnaby’s head came in violent contact with a beam of the bridge, resulting in his death within a few hours. He was never conscious after he was injured.

Because of the nature of the load carried by the train at the time of the accident, Mr. Barnaby was engaged in interstate commerce, and this cause is therefore governed by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq.

Plaintiffs pleaded, as independent grounds for recovery, two specific acts of the defendant, each of which they contend constituted negligence and a proximate cause of Mr. Barnaby’s injury and consequent death. One ground of recovery was that the defendant had maintained the beam of the East Bosque bridge too close to the side window of the locomotive which the deceased was operating for him to perform his duties with reasonable safety to himself; the other was that the defendant had maintained its tracks in such a rough and uneven condition as to cause the engine which deceased was operating to sway from left to right as it passed onto the bridge at the time he was injured.

Defendant pleaded that Mr. Barnaby, at the time he was injured,-was engaged in interstate commerce and, by reason thereof, his cause of action was governed by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act; that the condition of the bridge, track and roadbed had been substantially the same for many years; that the deceased had been employed for thirty years and had continuously operated engines- of various sizes over this and similar bridges on said line, including engines the size of the one he was operating at the time of the accident; that such conditions were open, obvious and manifest and the deceased assumed the risk incident thereto by virtue of his employment.

The court overruled defendant’s motions for a peremptory instruction and submitted the case to a jury on special issues. The findings of the jury were favorable to plaintiffs; and, insofar as material here, were substantially as follows: (1) The defendant failed to maintain the beam of the East Bosque bridge at such distance from the side window of the engineer’s cab of the locomotive being operated by Mr. Barnaby as to permit him to perform his duties as engineer with reasonable safety to himself; (2) that such failure was negligence, and a proximate cause of the injury and death of deceased; (3) that the tracks of the defendant were so rough and uneven as to cause the engine on which Mr. Barnaby was riding to sway from left to right as it passed onto the bridge; (4) that the fact that the tracks were in such condition was negligence, and a proximate cause of Mr. Barnaby’s death; (5) that Mr. Barnaby did not know the distance from the beam of the bridge to the cab of the engine when entering on the bridge in question with an engine of the 700 class; (6) that the distance from the beam of the bridge to the cab of an engine of the 700 class was not so open and obvious that a person of ordinary prudence would have known of it; (7) that Mr. Barnaby did not know that the dist&nce of the beam from the cab of his engine endangered his safety; (8) that the distance of the beam of the bridge from the cab of an engine of the 700 class was not so open and obvious that an ordinarily prudent person, under the existing facts and circumstances,, would have appreciated that it endangered his safety; (9) that Mr. Barnaby, at the time and under the circumstances ⅛ evidence, did not know that the distance of the beam from the cab of his engine endangered his safety; (10) the distance of the beam of the bridge from the cab of an engine of the 700 class was not so open and obvious that an ordinarily prudent person, under the existing facts and circumstances, would have appreciated that it endangered his safety; (11) Mr. Barnaby did not know of the condition of the tracks and roadbed west of the bridge; (12) the condition of [238]*238the tracks and roadbed west of the bridge was not so open and obvioirs that a person of reasonable prudence, in the exercise of ordinary care, must have known of it; (13) Mr. Barnaby, at the time in question, did not know that the condition of the tracks and roadbed west of the bridge endangered his safety; (14) the condition of the tracks and roadbed west of the bridge was not so obvious that an ordinarily prudent person, under the existing facts and circumstances, would have appreciated that it endangered his safety; (IS) the death of the deceased was not due to an unavoidable accident.

Based on the above findings, and others not herein set out because immaterial to this appeal, the court rendered judgment against defendant for the aggregate sum of $10,200, with interest and costs.

Defendant predicates the appeal on two points. It contends that the trial court was in error in rendering judgment against it because: (1) Under all the evidence Mr. Barnaby had- assumed the risks created by the acts of negligence pleaded by plaintiffs and found by the jury to have been committed by the defendant; and (2) there was no evidence that any pleaded act of negligence of the defendant was a proximate cause of the death of the deceased.

Because of the defendant’s assignments of error it becomes necessary to discuss the evidence adduced in the trial of this case.

Mr. Barnaby had been in the employ of appellant for approximately thirty years as a locomotive engineer on .its Texas Central branch, and had been on the run from De-Leon to Bell Meade,, a distance of 117 miles, for approximately three years prior to his death. At the time of the accident Mr. Barnaby’s schedule required him to leave Bell Meade at midnight, arrive at De-Leon the next morning, and to leave the latter place the same morning, returning to Bell Meade that afternoon. During this three year period Mr. Barnaby usually drove an engine of the 700 class but occasionally an engine of the 500 class was put in use.

The bridge on which Mr. Barnaby was killed was built in 1908. According to the testimony of one witness it had a clearance of 14 feet 1 inch (another witness testified 14 feet 3 inches) between the end beams, and this clearance was never increased. At the time this bridge was built engines of the 107 and 108 class were being used; and they, according to one witness, “were very small.” There was more clearance on the bridge in question between the end beams, when the small engines were used, than there was when larger engines were used, the clearance being much less with the 700 class engine than with the 107 class. While the clearance on this bridge was never increased after it was built, the size of the engines used over it became larger and larger until the 700 class engines were obtained, they being the largest of all. Engines of the 107 and 108-class weighed about 80 tons; engines of the 700 class weighed 287,500 pounds.

Between Walnut Springs and DeLeon,, on Mr.

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167 S.W.2d 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-kansas-texas-r-co-of-texas-v-barnaby-texapp-1942.