Richard Haynes v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, a Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 2020
Docket01-18-00181-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Richard Haynes v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, a Corporation (Richard Haynes v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, a Corporation) 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
Richard Haynes v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, a Corporation, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued January 28, 2020.

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00181-CV ——————————— RICHARD HAYNES, Appellant V. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, A CORPORATION, Appellee

On Appeal from the 189th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2006-40557

OPINION

Appellant Richard Haynes was injured as he attempted to leave the Strang

Railyard where he worked for appellee Union Pacific Railroad Company (UP).

Haynes sued UP under the Federal Employment Labor Act (FELA), and the jury

ultimately concluded that UP was negligent, determining that UP was 35% responsible and Haynes was 65% contributorily negligent regarding his injuries.

The jury awarded Haynes a total of $1,095,000 in damages, and the trial court

rendered judgment on this verdict after reducing it for Haynes’s contributory

negligence and two liens. On appeal, Haynes argues that (1) the trial court

erroneously charged the jury on aggravation of a pre-existing condition; (2) the

trial court repeatedly showed bias against and hostility toward Haynes and his

counsel; and (3) even if “the foregoing errors, standing alone, were insufficient to

warrant a new trial, their cumulative effect deprived [Haynes] of a fair trial and

require that a new trial be granted on all issues.” In a cross-appeal, UP argues that

(1) the FELA does not apply to Haynes’s claims because he was not acting in the

course of his employment with UP at the time he was injured, and, thus, Texas’s

proportionate responsibility statute bars any recovery at all by Haynes; and

(2) alternatively, the trial court should have applied an offset for railroad retirement

taxes.

We conclude that the FELA applies to Haynes’s claim against UP, that the

trial court’s charge was not erroneous, that the record does not support Haynes’s

claim of bias or cumulative harm, and that UP was entitled to the offset for railroad

retirement taxes. Accordingly, we modify the judgment to apply the offset and

affirm the judgment as modified.

2 Background

Haynes worked for UP as a carman, responsible for inspecting and repairing

rail cars. At the time of his injury, Haynes had worked for UP for approximately

seven years and had been assigned to the Strang Yard, the railyard where he was

injured, for between six and eight months.

On April 1, 2005, the day of his injury, Haynes had received permission

from his supervisor to leave work approximately thirty minutes before the regular

end of his shift so that he could say goodbye to his wife and daughter before they

left on a trip. At the time Haynes attempted to leave the Strang Yard, a “humping”

operation was ongoing.

A humping operation involves breaking apart an incoming train, one rail car

at a time, and allowing the cars to roll down a “hump track” into an area called the

“bowl.” In the bowl, there are several different tracks (the bowl tracks) where the

cars can then be put back together to form different outbound trains. The humping

operation starts with a locomotive engine pushing from the back of the incoming

train to shove the rail cars down the hump track until the forward-most car reaches

a point called the pin-puller’s spot. At the pin-puller’s spot, an employee called the

pin-puller or carman pulls a lever between the forward-most car and the next car,

disconnecting the forward-most car from the rest of the incoming train. The

downward slope of the hump track causes the released car to free-roll down into

3 the bowl where the car is assembled into a new outbound train. The pin-puller

repeats this process, releasing the cars from the incoming train until all of the cars

are coupled to new, outbound trains.

The humping operation happening on the afternoon of April 1, 2005,

blocked the main crossing out of the parking lot where Haynes had parked that

day, and the operation was likely to continue for approximately twenty to thirty

more minutes. The parking lot also had four other exits. One of those, however,

was locked, and two were in a state of disrepair. The fourth route, and the one

Haynes chose to take that afternoon, involved crossing the hump track at a place

called the “tower crossing” and then continuing to the main road. The tower

crossing was steep, narrow, and poorly maintained. It had been designed primarily

for use by all-terrain vehicles or “four-wheelers,” but workers also crossed it in

their personal vehicles on a regular basis.

Haynes testified that he had used the tower crossing on multiple occasions

during humping operations, driving both his work truck and his personal vehicle.

He testified that he had even crossed at the tower crossing during humping

operations with his supervisor in the truck with him. Other employees likewise

testified that employees and managers used the tower crossing in both company

and personal vehicles during humping operations, when the main crossing was

blocked. For example, a former UP employee, who had worked in the Strang Yard

4 around the time Haynes was injured, testified that he had observed a variety of

vehicles cross the tower crossing while humping operations were blocking the

main exit. He stated that “all the car people” would cross over in their personal

vehicles and on the “four-wheelers that they rode during their shift,” and he

testified that he would also see “the company officers’ jeeps go across . . . if the

other crossing was blocked.” He further testified that it was “a common practice”

for people to cross the tower crossing in a company or personal vehicle “with the

humping operation still going on.”

Haynes testified that, when he approached the tower crossing on April 1,

2005, he looked up the hump track and did not see any cars rolling toward him

down the hump track. He honked his horn to get the attention of the pin-puller who

was releasing the train cars down the hump track. He saw the pin-puller walk

“back towards the back of the cars,” back up the hump track away from Haynes’s

car at the tower crossing. Haynes believed that the pin-puller would have to walk

back to the point known as the pin-puller’s spot, “pull the cart lever and hold it and

walk back to the line and then release [the next car].” Haynes testified that it

appeared the last rail car on the incoming train had recoiled back up the hill, away

from him, so he believed that he had adequate time to cross the tower crossing in

his vehicle, a Honda Accord. However, as he attempted to cross, he became stuck

in the center of the crossing. He was unable to move his vehicle, either because the

5 tower crossing was too steep or too narrow, and he was unable to open the driver’s

door because the handle broke. Another rail car came down the hump track and

struck Haynes’s vehicle, pushing it down the hump track into the bowl. At that

point, Haynes was able to jump out of his vehicle’s window, and he landed on the

ground in the bowl. He heard another rail car heading toward him, but the

employee conducting the humping operation saw what had happened and rerouted

the rail car onto a different bowl track.

As a result of the April 1, 2005 accident, Haynes suffered numerous serious

injuries, including a dislocated femur, fractured pelvis, damaged left shoulder,

fractured ribs, and a closed head injury. He required several surgeries, including a

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