Rio Grande, E. P. S. F. R. v. Dupree

35 S.W.2d 809
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 2409.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 809 (Rio Grande, E. P. S. F. R. v. Dupree) 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
Rio Grande, E. P. S. F. R. v. Dupree, 35 S.W.2d 809 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

On March 24, 1928, Dr. W. A. Dupree was killed in a collision between a Ford truck in which he was riding and a freight train operated by the Atchison, Topeka Santa FE Railway Company on the track of the Rio Grande, El Paso Santa Feacute Railroad Company.

This suit is by the appellee, Mrs. Dora Dupree, surviving wife of the deceased, suing in her own behalf and as next friend for her two minor sons, against the companies above named, to recover damages for the alleged negligent killing of her said husband. The *Page 810 collision occurred in El Paso county at a public crossing known as the Tendick Crossing.

The case was submitted upon the general issue resulting in verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $50,000. Upon the motion for new trial a remittitur of $14,000 was required by the court and entered by the plaintiff and judgment finally rendered for $36,000 against both defendants, apportioned $24,000 to the widow, $5,000 to one child, and $7,000 to the other.

As against the defendants the only issue of negligence submitted was the failure to give the statutory signals in approaching the crossing. Upon this issue the evidence was conflicting and by the verdict resolved in the plaintiffs' favor. As to the conclusive effect of that finding, no point is here made.

At the time of the collision Dr. Dupree and his son John were riding in the truck. Dr. Dupree was killed instantly and his son so crushed and mangled he died in a few minutes after the collision. The evidence does not disclose which of the two was at the wheel of the car when the collision occurred.

The issue of contributory negligence on the part of the driver of the truck or Dr. Dupree, in failing to keep a proper lookout for the approaching train, was submitted.

It is asserted that under the evidence contributory negligence, as a matter of law, is shown, and verdict in the defendants' favor should have been peremptorily instructed.

The evidence upon this issue is undisputed except perhaps in some minor and noncontrolling features.

At the place of the collision the track is straight for quite a distance. The paved state highway leading from El Paso to Las Cruces, N.M., runs parallel with the track and adjacent to the railroad right of way. This is a heavily traveled highway. Dr. Dupree's home is a short distance from the highway and across the railroad. He and his son were thoroughly familiar with the Tendick Crossing, having used it daily for some months prior to the accident. At the time in question the truck came along the highway traveling in the direction of Las Cruces. The train consisting of an engine and twelve freight cars was traveling in the opposite direction. When the crossing was reached the truck turned to the left and proceeded to the track in the direction of the Dupree home when the front left fender and wheel struck the locomotive. The point of impact was back of the cylinder head of the locomotive about 10 feet from the pilot. According to the testimony of the witness Bryant, fireman upon the engine, the man riding upon the right side of the truck grabbed the steering wheel just before the collision. This evidently swerved the truck to the right in an effort to avoid the collision and caused the impact to occur at the front left fender and wheel of the truck instead of the truck running head-on into the side of the locomotive. The train was traveling thirty-five or forty miles an hour. The truck was traveling ten or twelve miles an hour on the highway as it approached the crossing. There is a double row of telegraph and telephone poles between the railroad track and the highway, one row being on the railroad right of way, the other on the highway between the pavement and railroad right of way. Between the pavement and the railroad right of way is a salt cedar or tamarack bush about 12 feet high and 14 or 15 feet in width. This bush is about 460 feet from the crossing and upon the side of the crossing from which the train came. At the time a severe windstorm was blowing and the atmosphere impregnated thereby with dust and sand. It is 69 feet from the pavement to the railroad track, and at that point the track is about 2 or 2 1/2 feet higher than the highway.

Excerpts from the testimony of various witnesses follows:

Sheppard, brakeman on the train, testified:

"Prior to that accident, I was riding on the engine on the brakeman's seat, directly in front of the fireman. That is on the lefthand side of the engine. * * * There is a highway running along beside the railroad, the highway was on my side of the engine. I had a view of the highway. That high way is very much in use. I saw the truck prior to the collision, that we were in collision with afterwards, but I didn't pay much attention to it until just about the time when it hit the train. When I first saw the truck, it was pretty close to the crossing, I couldn't say how close. It was on the highway, coming straight up the highway. There was nothing about it to indicate he intended to turn there. I did not know he was going to turn there. * * * He was continuously in my sight up to near the time of the collision. I noticed him turn off, just a few seconds before the collision. He did not stop. I couldn't tell whether he looked around to see whether a train was coming or not, I couldn't see through the windshield, I couldn't tell just who was in the car. It didn't seem to me he slowed down, it didn't seem that the speed of the automobile perceptibly decreased. I didn't do nothing until they hit, and I hollered at the engineer we hit a car on the side of the train. Probably ten seconds intervened between the time I saw him turn off and the time the collision occurred, something like that, I don't know, a very short time. I didn't have time to do nothing from the time I saw he wasn't going to stop until the collision. The automobile hit the engine. It hit the engine right on the front drivers, back about ten feet from the pilot, back of the cylinder *Page 811 head. From the time I saw him turn off and saw he wasn't going to stop, there wasn't anything I could have done to prevent that accident."

Bryant, the fireman, testified:

"I saw the truck prior to the accident, I saw it about the time it left the paved highway there. I formed an estimate that the truck was going about ten or twelve miles per hour. He did not stop before undertaking to cross the tracks. As to what those in the automobile did, as far as I could see, from the time they left the highway until the accident, — well, the only thing that I saw them do was the man riding on the right side, it seemed he grabbed for the steering wheel Just before the accident happened. Just before they ran into the side of the engine, it seemed to me that the man on the right side of the truck grabbed the steering wheel of the truck. The man that was riding on the lefthand side of the truck was the man behind the steering wheel, and the man on the right side, it seemed to me, tried to grab the steering wheel just before the accident. The time that intervened between the time I saw them leave the highway until the collision happened, was Just a matter of a few seconds. * * * The car struck the engine Just back of the left cylinder. That is about ten or twelve feet from the cowcatcher. I believe that was a Ford truck they were driving. I believe it had a top or cab around the front part."

The witness Phillips testified:

"I recall the incident of the death of Dr. Dupree on March 24th, 1928. I saw the train prior to this accident. Just prior to this accident, I was just above the crossing, driving a truck for the Gulf Refining Company. I was coming to El Paso. * * * The day was an unusually windy day, and it was blowing sand at that crossing, I mean where the accident happened.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.2d 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rio-grande-e-p-s-f-r-v-dupree-texapp-1931.