Reid v. Texas & New Orleans R. Co.

254 S.W.2d 164, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1952
Docket12456
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 254 S.W.2d 164 (Reid v. Texas & New Orleans R. 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
Reid v. Texas & New Orleans R. Co., 254 S.W.2d 164, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2255 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This is an appeal from the action of the trial court, at the conclusion of plaintiffs’ evidence, in directing a verdict and rendering judgment for defendant Railway Company. By agreement of the parties the suits which had been brought individually against the defendant Railway Company by plaintiffs, James D. Reid and John T. Kirtley Jr., were consolidated.

On October 8, 1944, about 3:50 a. m., the automobile which was being operated by plaintiff Reid and in which John T. Kirtley, Jr., was riding as a passenger ran ■ into a tank car which was on a spur track of defendant that crossed the Wallisville Road at defendant’s Englewood yards in Harris County. The tank car formed a part of a string of eight cars and at the time the tank car was .run into- it blocked the Wallisville Road.

The consolidated suit was one to recover individually for the damages sustained by the respective plaintiffs as the result of the alleged negligence of the defendant Railway Company in various specified acts and omissions.

The basis upon which plaintiffs predicated their suit for damages was that the defendant Railway Company knew or, by the exercise of ordinary care, should have known that the railroad crossing in question was one which was more than an ordinarily dangerous nighttime crossing and which for that reason required more than ordinary precautions to give warning of the danger incident to crossing same.

*165 This appeal is predicated upon 8 points, the first 7 of which complain of the court’s action in excluding the testimony of 7 different witnesses tendered for the purpose of undertaking to prove the allegations that the defendant Railway Company knew, or, by the exercise of ordinary care, should have known that the crossing was more than an ordinarily dangerous nighttime crossing. The eighth point was to the effect that the court erred in granting the Railway Company’s motion for a directed verdict because the pleadings and evidence presented fact issues to go to the jury.

The substance of the plaintiffs’ material allegations were as follows:

That defendant’s main line tracks run in an easterly and westerly direction paralleling the Wallisville Road and from said main line tracks a spur or connecting track or tracks 'branched off in a southerly direction crossing the Wallisville Road at approximately the 5800 block at right angles. That the Wallisville Road at the crossing is a black-top public street or road, which then and for a long time prior thereto carried a large volume of motor traffic. That at the crossing the grade is approximately level and that at all material times the crossing was used day and night by multiplied thousands of people and is in a thickly settled neighborhood 'bordering in and around the incorporated city limits of Houston, and is one of the two main thoroughfares on the north side of the city leading to many and extremely large war industries in, on and near the Houston ship channel. That the main-line-crossing was about three blocks away, where defendant maintained signal lights, gates, bells and a watchman and other warning signals at all times. That said Wallisville Road begins at said main crossing and is fed by easterly bound traffic for many miles from the western and northern part of the city and large areas of numerous suburban additions coming in from and near said thoroughfares. That the crossing in question leads out of defendant’s Englewood yards where a large creosoting plant is maintained. That said crossing is partly isolated, concealed and obscured from the view of the public in approaching same upon said Wallisville Road, more particularly from the east by various obstructions hiding the same from view. That the traffic and traveling public are confronted by a high fence for a distance of more than 3,000 feet, high weeds, and as said crossing is approached nearer there are several buildings, and a high boarded fence, and high stacks of lumber, timbers, cross-ties and material and high weeds. That on the south side of said road in approaching said crossing there are numerous houses and buildings, and within a few feet of said right of way there is -a large cluster of trees with heavy massive foliage and high weeds which isolate, conceal and obscure trains, engines and cars from view of the traveling public upon said crossing in broad daylight -as well as on dark nights and/or during heavy fogs during the nighttime. That such facts and conditions surrounding the crossing created a perilous situation of constant potential danger and was more than ordinarily dangerous and hazardous to the safety of the people using said crossing. All of which the defendant knew, or, by the exercise of ordinary care, should have known. That at the time and on the occasion in question there were no lights, bells, wigwags, signals or watchman maintained at said crossing by the defendant to warn people moving over said crossing of the presence of said railroad track or of the probability of trains using same. That such existing dangerous conditions were greatly aggravated and greatly intensified during heavy fogs on dark nights due to the fact defendant maintained an approximately 600 candle power light suspended about 20 feet over and above the area of said crossing, “which reflected 'blinding beam high above said fog causing a blinding glare to the traveling public so as to obscure said crossing, which reduced the distance of visibility five or six times less, as compared with the normal visibility where there were no blinding lights over the fog upon said Wallisville Road; that defendant knew of the dangerous condition created by the high light over the fog, and wholly failed to install *166 and maintain any lights near the ground, or install bells, wigwag signals or keep a watchman present at said crossing * *

Plaintiffs each alleged in substance that on the night in question plaintiff Reid, accompanied by plaintiff John T. Kirtley Jr. and by Jean Bowman (who is an appellant in a companion case pending here), was driving in a westerly direction on said Wallisville Road in a lawful and careful manner during a heavy fog, with the automobile under control to stop within the normal view of visibility. That immediately upon approaching said crossing he was without warning suddenly subjected to the blinding glare from said high strong light from above the fog, as aforesaid, which caused a dense smoky condition that enveloped said crossing which reduced the visibility to about 8 feet, “being many times less than the ordinary normal visibility, in which he had been driving as aforesaid for a long distance; that shortly prior to said occasion the Defendant * * * had run one of its freight trains out of said Englewood Yards over and upon said * * * railroad tracks, and had stopped the same and entirely blocked said crossing with freight and black tank cars so that traffic moving over said Wallisville Road could not cross said crossing * *

In particularizing, the plaintiffs alleged in substance as the actionable negligence which rendered defendant liable for plaintiffs’ injuries the following, which may be condensed into the following:

(1) in permitting the train to stand on the crossing for an illegal or unreasonable length of time.

(2) failing to provide visual or audible signals to warn approaching vehicles of the presence of the tracks or cars.

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254 S.W.2d 164, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-texas-new-orleans-r-co-texapp-1952.