Oxsher v. Houston East & West Texas Railway Co.

67 S.W. 550, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 420, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 335
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 12, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 550 (Oxsher v. Houston East & West Texas Railway Co.) 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
Oxsher v. Houston East & West Texas Railway Co., 67 S.W. 550, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 420, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 335 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

ELY, Associate Justice.

Appellant, an alleged minor, through his next friend, G. E. Oxsher, instituted this suit to recover damages of appellee, resulting from the crushing of his foot by the wheel of a car. .The court instructed a verdict for appellee.

It was developed by the facts that appellant, who was about 18 years of age, went in company with two ladies, his relatives, and four children, to Garrison, a station on appellee’s line of railway to assist them on the train, about 10:30 o’clock at night, on June 25, 1900. Two young men named Weatherly were also assisting the ladies and children. When the train arrived the three young men, in company with the women and children, got on the train, which was very crowded. After procuring seats for some of the party the train began to move, and the three young men ran out on the platform of the car and jumped off. Appellant struck a freight car on a siding and was knocked under the coach and had his foot so badly crushed that it had to be amputated. The train was running from seven to ten miles an hour when appellant jumped off. Appellant entered the train with a basket in his hand. One of the other young men carried baggage, and the remaining one carried a child. The conductor passed the people as they were moving towards the train, and he asked one of the young men where the people were going, and he replied that they were going to Houston. Nothing was said or done to indicate to the conductor that the young men were getting on the car merely to assist the women and children, and that they desired to get off. - The train remained at the station from three to five minutes, the usual time. The young men testified that they heard no signal given for the train to start. It was dark, where appellant jumped off, and he did not take time to see where he was jumping. The train stopped long enough at the station to give full time for passengers to get off and on the car.

We do not think the evidence established any negligence upon the part of the railway company, and it was therefore not error for the court to instruct a verdict for appellee. It is not alleged nor proved that the conductor had any notice of the fact that the young men desired to get off the car after entering it, and the appearance of the men carrying a child and baggage tended to lead to the reasonable conclusion that they, like the women and children, were entering the car to remain. In the absence of knowledge, or such facts as would charge with knowledge, on the part of the conductor that appellant did not intend to become a passenger, the railroad company owed him no duty except to give him a reasonable time to safely board the train. That this was done was uncontroverted. It may be that the conductor should have *422 assisted the women and children on the car, and that a stool should have been provided on which they might the more easily enter the car, hut the failure to assist and to furnish the stool had no direct connection with the accident. Appellant went to the station to help them on, independent of a want of assistance from a conductor or the lack of a stool. It is not intended to convey the impression that had his assistance to the women and children been the direct result of the lack of assistance on the part of the conductor, it could have any controlling influence on the decision of this ease. The basis “of the decision must be-that the railway company, in the absence of notice that appellant desired to get off, was under no obligation to hold the train long enough to give him time so to do, and this conclusion is fortified by the decisions, of this and other States.

In the case of Eailway v. Miller, 8 Texas Civil Appeals, 341, the-Court of Civil Appeals held in a case similar to this: “The relations, sustained between the railway company and appellee do not arise out of contract, and the obligations are not such as are imposed by contract.. Appellee did not go into the train as a passenger, and hence the duties-imposed by law upon carriers to passengers did not rest upon the company and govern its conduct towards him. He went upon the train-under an implied permission or license, and the company owed him the-duty of ordinary care. * * * The company was under obligation to passengers to stop the train a sufficient length of time for those desiring to get off and those desiring to take passage to do so with safety. It was the duty of appellee to take notice of the usual length of time, and if it was not sufficient, and it was necessary for him to go into the train, in order to, place upon the company the duty of holding specially for him to disembark he must have given notice of his intention.”

In the case of Railway v. MeGilvary, 39 Southwestern Reporter, 67, it was said by the same court: “Plaintiff did not stand in the same relation to the company as a passenger, and therefore the liability of the company can not be measured by the standard of duty to passengers. While plaintiff was not a trespasser, and the company was under-obligation not to negligently injure him, yet whether or not the company was negligent must depend upon the knowledge the employes had of plaintiff’s intention to immediately disembark from the train, or ■that the train did not stop the usual length of time, and the same was started without giving some signal indicating an intention to start.”' The same doctrine is announced in Dillingham v. Pierce, 31 S. W. Rep., 303.

In the case of Railway v. Leslie, 57 Texas, 83, where the plaintiff, who-boarded the train to assist some ladies and children who intended to leave on it, had jumped off and was injured, it was said: “There is no evidence showing any pther connection of the defendant’s agents with the accident except such culpability as may be implied from the short period of time the train of cars remained at the station; and if the defendant is not liable on account of its failure to stop at" said station. *423 five minutes, as required by law, or to passengers to board the train, there would exist no basis whatever for complaint in this case against the defendant.”

In the case of Railway v. Miller, 39 Southwestern Reporter, 583, decided by this court, the liability of the railway company was made to depend on the knowledge of the conductor that the plaintiff was on the train, following the opinion in the same case by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth District, above cited.

In the case of Berry v. Railway, 60 Southwestern Reporter, 699, the plaintiff got on the train to assist his wife and children and mother-in-law, and was injured in getting off the train, which was leaving the station. The Supreme Court of Kentucky reviewed, among others, the McGilvary and Miller cases above cited, and in conclusion said: “From these and numerous decisions bearing upon this question, we think it is clear that, if appellee had actual or constructive notice that appellant had gone into the car for the purpose of seating his wife and children, and that he intended to get off before the train started, it was their duty to have given him notice before starting the train, and to have held it long enough for him to get off with safety; but in the absence of such notice, no obligation existed on their part.” A peremptory instruction was given for the railway company by the trial court and the judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, the court of last resort in Kentucky.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 550, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 420, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxsher-v-houston-east-west-texas-railway-co-texapp-1902.