Pecos & N. T. Ry. Co. v. Chatten

185 S.W. 911, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 521
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1916
DocketNo. 954.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 911 (Pecos & N. T. Ry. Co. v. Chatten) 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
Pecos & N. T. Ry. Co. v. Chatten, 185 S.W. 911, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 521 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

The plaintiff, and appel-lee, Chatten, alleged that while in the employ of defendant, repairing a road, it was his duty to uncouple certain cars, the coupling upon one of which was out of order and did not work automatically, requiring him to go between the ears and use his hands for that purpose; that while between the cars he signaled the engineer for the movement of the train in a certain direction, and said engineer suddenly moved said cars in an opposite direction from "that indicated by his signal, and that on account of the sudden and unexpected movement of said train, his left foot was caught and run over and was mashed and crushed, inflicting permanent injuries; that defendant’s agents, in moving the train in an opposite direction from that indicated by the signal, and permitting an automatic coupler to be in bad repair so as to require plaintiff to go between the cars to uncouple the same, constituted negligence. The automatic coupler alleged to 'have been out of order was operated by a lever in a position on the side and end of the car, precluding the necessity of coupling and uncoupling by the brakeman between the cars. The allegations of the plaintiff, as to the negligence of the employés of the defendant, with reference to the movement by the engineer of his engine in an opposite direction from the signal indicated, and the bad repair of the automatic coupler, were sustained by the testimony. The defendants specially answered by pleas of assumed risk and contributory' negligence, and especially that plaintiff had been cautioned and warned not to. go between the cars, and had violated the rules of the company in so doing, and had signed an application for employment, stating that he knew that he was not required to go into dangerous places and expose himself to hazardous positions.

The trial court, in the fourth paragraph of his charge, instructed the jury that if plaintiff went in between the cars—

“to manipulate the couplers between said cars, under the directions of the conductor, to uncouple two of the cars, and the coupler and attachments thereto were so out of order that the same would not uncouple without the necessity of the plaintiff going in between said cars and manipulating- the coupler or its attachments with his hands, and that plaintiff signaled the servants operating the train to move it in one direction, and instead of so moving the train in the direction that plaintiff’s signal indicated, the same should be moved, the servants operating the train moved it in the opposite direction, suddenly and unexpectedly to plaintiff, and the wheel of one of the cars caught the foot of the plaintiff and injured it, and that the allowing of the couplers to be out of order, if this was so, and the moving of the train in the opposite direction to that indicated by the signal of the plaintiff, if this was a fact, was negligence and the proximate cause of the injury, and (if) you fail to find that plaintiff assumed the risk you will find for plaintiff and assess his damages, unless you find for the defendant under some other charge herein given you.”

[t] The fifth assignment of error complains that the language, “that he went between the cars to manipulate the couplers between said cars under immediate control of the eye of the conductor to couple the two cars,” is upon the weight of the evidence and an enlargement upon the testimony. Plaintiff’s own statement, we think, refutes this assertion.

“The plaintiff testified that the conductor said ‘Get the pin,’ and that the conductor was hardly 30 feet away at the time, and that the conductor said, ‘Cut ’em in two, and pull the pin,' and he could not get it, and that the conductor said, ‘Pull the other one.’ ”

[2] The sixth assignment complains that the words, “suddenly and unexpectedly,” with reference to the movement of the train at the time plaintiff was hurt, was error because unsupported by the facts. The jury *913 necessarily understood that the language used was relative, and in that sense the testimony supports that the movement was a sudden and unexpected movement, if they believed the plaintiff.

The seventh assignment of error complains of the charge to the jury defining contributory negligence, in that it was not applied to the facts of the case as proven. Part of the assignment is based upon the action of the trial court in overruling the sixth paragraph of defendant’s objections and exceptions to his charge. The statement under this assignment does not set forth the objection to the general charge. When we turn to the transcript the objections to the general charge are, in substance, that contributory negligence is not applied to the facts.

[3] In this same assignment (the seventh) the refusal of the following special charge by the trial court is also called in question:

“If you believe that the plaintiff, in the discharge of his duties, could have cut the cars by going over the cars and using the lever on the opposite side from where he was working, or by the use of other available means, if any, which did not require him to go between the cars, and you further find and believe that, in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, he should have gone over the cars and used the lever on the opposite of the cars, or should have used other available means, if any, for cutting the cars, without going between the cars, or placing his body or limbs in a dangerous position, then you will return a verdict for the defendant.”

Such a charge, if given by the court, would have been wholly erroneous. If they found contributory negligence as1 suggested therein, it would have been a peremptory instruction against the negligence of the defendants, as charged by the petition and raised by the evidence. Specially requested charge No. 7, also embodied in this assignment, as having been refused by the trial court, is merely a ' general declaration that plaintiff should exercise ordinary care in the discharge of his duties, and as to its peremptory feature is in the same condition as the previous special charge.

[4, 5] The eighth assignment of error embodies a complaint on account of the trial court’s refusal of the following special charge:

“If you believe that by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence the plaintiff, in the discharge of his duties, could have uncoupled the car by the use of the lever on the side of the train where he was working, and you further find that plaintiff raised the pin too high, and that in so doing he failed to exercise ordinary care, then you will find in favor of the defendants, unless you should find that the defendants’ employés failed to exercise ordinary care in receiving, transmitting, and acting upon signals given by the plaintiff.”

Under this assignment is the following statement:

“Plaintiff testified that he raised the pin too high. The undisputed evidence by all the trainmen testifying was to the effect that Chatten fthe plaintiff) could have used another lever on the side he was working, or could have gone across the car and have used the lever on the other side.”

We fail to see what the lever on the other side and plaintiff’s accessibility to it has to do with this particular charge.

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Related

Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Smith
197 S.W. 614 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 911, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecos-n-t-ry-co-v-chatten-texapp-1916.