Reza v. International-Great Northern R.

277 S.W. 182
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1925
DocketNo. 7397. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 182 (Reza v. International-Great Northern R.) 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
Reza v. International-Great Northern R., 277 S.W. 182 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

Appellant, a 15 month'old boy, was struck and injured by one of appellee’s freight trains as it passed thrpugh a populous residential district of the city of San Antonio.. The child lived with his parents in their home adjoining appellee’s right of way near its intersection with Mistletoe avenue. At the place of the accident the railway track rested upon a dump, about five feet ¿hove the level of the right of way and adjacent premises. The child, which had been playing in the yard with an older sister, while the mother was busy about her household duties, escaped their notice, and wandered onto the dump. A switch engine, hacking and pulling a string of tank cars, passed the point shortly before the accident occurred, from which it must be inferred that the child was struck immediately after reaching its perilous position. Its mother, hearing the train approach, walked to her door, looked out, and saw the child standing between and near the end of two cross-ties, when the train struck it. The train, without pausing, proceeded on its way' into San Antonio. This suit followed.

Appellant based his suit upon the contention that the accident was proximately caused by the negligence of appellee in that (1) the employees operating the train in ques *183 tion failed to keep a proper lookout; (2) to sound the train whistle; (3) to ring the bell; and (4) operated the train at an excessive rate of speed; (5) that appellee failed to have its right of way fenced; ■ and (6) permitted weeds and grass to grow on the right of way; and (7) appellant also pleaded discovered peril. The trial court refused to submit any of the issues thus pleaded, except that of proper lookout, which the jury resolved in favor of the railway company. From the resulting adverse judgment the plaintiff below has appealed, solely upon the grounds that the court erred in refusing to submit the rejected issues i^o the jury.

The railway company impleaded the engineer and fireman of the train in question, but the finding in favor of the railway com-piany had the effect of eliminating them from the ease, which will be disposed of on this appeal without further reference to them.

Appellant’s first proposition is directed at the refusal of the trial court, upon proper request, to submit to the jury the issue of whether or not appellee’s train was being operated at a negligently excessive speed at the time it struck appellant, and whether or not such negligence proximately caused the injury to appellant. The whole of appellant’s ease in support of this issue was contained in the testimony of appellant’s mother that “the train was running very fast, I don’t know how fast it was, but it was very fast,” and of one Munoz, who testified by deposition that “I judge the train was running 15 miles an hour at the time and before the injury to the child.” The train which struck appellant consisted of nearly 40 cars, and was about a quarter of a mile long. It was coming into San Antonio from the north, having made the run from Bracken, 18 miles distant, in 80 minutes, or an average speed of about 11 miles an hour. When it reached Summit avenue, 3 or 4 blocks from the place of the accident, it was brought to a full stop for the switch engine and oil tanks, which had come onto, the main line tracks from a nearby oil refinery. When this switch engine hád moved out ahead, the train was started, and followed along at an interval of 2 or 3 blocks. The switch crew testified that they moved down into town at a speed of 5 to 7 miles an hour, and the crew on the train following testified that the latter, keeping its distance behind the switch engine and tank cars, moved at a rate of 5 to 8 miles an hour. The train had started from a full stop at Summit avenue, and had proceeded only 3 or 4 blocks when the accident occurred. The foregoing facts, testified to positively and directly by the \ two engine crews, was not gainsaid upon the trial except by the general statement of appellant’s mother that the train was moving “very fast,” and the statement contained in the deposition of Munoz that he “judged” the speed of the train to be 15 miles an hour. Thus arises the bald question of whether or not the train was moving at a negligently excessive speed at the-time and place of the accident. It should be added here that both the ordinances of the city of San Antonio and the rules of appellee railway company prohibited a speed in excess of 10 miles an hour at this point; and there was evidence from which a jury could have found that nearby -intersecting streets were among those most frequently traveled in the city, and that pedestrians frequently travel back and forth upon the railway tracks and right of way at the point of the accident. The question is whether or not in this state of the record the trial court erred in determining that the testimony of appellant’s mother and of the witness Munoz was so weak and of so little probative force as to raise no more than mere suspicion or surmise of negligence in the matter of the speed of the train, and that this surmise was overwhelmed by the direct and positive testimony of appellee’s witnesses, considered in connection with the physical facts which enveloped the transaction.

We have carefully examined the record with reference to this question. That the evidence offered by appellant upon this issue is extremely weak cannot be gainsaid. - The statement of' appellant’s mother that the train was “running very fast” means but little, indeed, when its general nature and the witness’ lack of opportunity for sanely approximating the speed of the train are considered. “Very fast” is a purely relative term. When standing alone it is too indefinite and elastic to furnish the basis for a verdict. The witness using the term here was the mother of the injured boy. She did not see the train until the moment it struck him, and it is inconceivable that her judgment as to the speed of the instrument of her child’s misfortune, exercised in that moment of her extreme terror and expressed in indefinite and general terms, was of dependable accuracy and value in ascertaining and determining the specific fact of the speed of the train. There remains, then, but the one isolated statement of the witness Munoz that in his “judgment” the'train was moving at a speed of 15 miles an hour when it struck appellant. This witness, a day laborer, who happened to be in the vicinity at the time, was not shown to have any qualification for judging the speed of a passing train, nor any particular opportunity of determining the approximate speed of this train. According to his testimony, he was'walking down the track ahead of the train. As the latter approached near him, from the rear, he stepped off the track, and stood aside until it passed him. His judgment as to the speed of the train was formed out of these circumstances. The trial court evidently did not regard his unsupported testimony of sufficient probative force to raise more than a suspicion of negligence on the part of appellee, as this wit *184 ness testified by deposition only, and, as neither court nor jury was permitted to appraise his credibility by personal observation of his appearance or manner of testifying, it was within the province of the court to determine the probative force of his testimony. We cannot say from,the record that the court abused its restricted discretion in so determining the matter, and in support of the right action of that tribunal we overrule appellant’s first proposition.

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reza-v-international-great-northern-r-texapp-1925.