Salter v. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co.

285 S.W. 1112, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1011
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1926
DocketNo. 8857.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 1112 (Salter v. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. 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
Salter v. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co., 285 S.W. 1112, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1011 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Appellants, parents of a 16-year old daughter, Vivian Salter, sought damages for the alleged negligent causing of her death by the railway company in a collision between one of its passenger trains and an automobile, in which the girl was riding, at a public crossing on the railway near Sylvan Beach Station. Vivian Salter and two other young girls were at the time, as guests, taking a ride upon his invitation with Morris (nicknamed Buddy) Miller in his Chandler car, all four sitting upon the front seat, and all being killed outright in the accident.

The negligence charged against the'railway company was in failing, (1) to keep a lookout for persons using and about to use the crossing ; (2) to ring the bell and blow the whistle within such distance from the crossing as would warn an ordinarily prudent person using or about to use it; (3) to maintain the crossing in such a condition as not to unnecessarily impair -the use thereof; (4) to keep a flagman there, or provide some other monitory device to warn people using or about to use it of the approach of trains; and (5) in operating the train at an excessive rate of speed.

In answering, the appellee railway company alleged that all four occupants of the automobile were guilty of contributory negligence in the failure of each and all of them to keep a proper lookout for the approaching train; that all four were sitting upon the front seat, and, as the car in which they were riding approached the train, it was running at the rate of 25 miles or more per hour, and they were laughing and talking, exercising no care whatever to discover the coming train.

Special issues embodying these averments of negligence on both sides went to the jury, all those-made by appellants being answered against them, except that appellee failed to exercise ordinary care in the two respects of neither keeping a proper lookout nor in giving due warning by blowing the whistle— each dereliction proximately contributing to the accident — while that of the appellee was answered by a finding that the deceased girl was guilty of contributory negligence causing her death in failing to see the train “in time to have notified the driver, so that he could have stopped the automobile in time to have prevented the collision.” On this verdict the court rendered judgment that appellants take nothing, and they appeal.

There was also a finding of the jury fixing the amount of damages appellants sustained, ■but since, in our opinion, the correctness of the judgment against them depends upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding of such contributory negligence on' the part of their deceased daughter, no further reference need be made to the case as made for them; it seems to have established in them a prima facie right to recover.

Proposition No. 1-B, as presented here by . the appellants, is as follows:

“The burden of proof is upon the defendant to establish by a preponderance of the evidence its defense of contributory negligence, and where the evidence is equally consistent with the exercise of due care on the part of plaintiff as it is with contributory negligence, the defendant fails to discharge such burden of proof.”

We think this contention should be sustained. The trial court had properly instructed the jury that the burden of proof was upon the appellee to establish “by a preponderance of the evidence” the defense of contributory negligence, which it had pleaded; that charge had also, and again properly, in view of the undisputed fact that Vivian Salter was only an invited guest for a ride in the automobile at the time, in submitting the matter to the jury, made this distinction :

*1113 “You are instructed that in considering the question of whether or not Vivian Salter was guilty of contributory negligence you will not find her guilty of contributory negligence simply because you may believe (if you do believe) Morris Miller, the driver of the automobile in which Vivian Salter was traveling at the time of the collision, was guilty of such negligence, but you will determine the question of her contributory negligence, if any, by what she did, or did not do, under all the facts and circumstances surrounding the case.”

The particular questions propounded, together with the answers returned, were these:

“Did the deceased, Vivian Salter, see or hear the approaching train as the automobile in which she was riding approached the crossing in time to have notified the driver, so that he could have stopped the automobile in time, to have prevented the collision?”
“She did not.”
“Was such failure on her part to- see the approaching train in such time negligence, as that term has heretofore been defined to you?”
“It was.”
“Was such negligence a cause, or contributing cause, of her injury and death?”
“It was.” '

Just what supported these answers is a vain search in the statement of facts; there is such a paucity of proof upon the matter as to raise very serious question as to the existence of any evidence at all of contributory negligence upon this girl’s part, but if there be any raising that issue, it clearly fails to constitute the required preponderance. No witness testified to seeing her or any one of the other three occupants of the car, as it approached the railroad crossing, look either away from or toward the train, -or do or not do any other act indicating indifference to their own safety, nor did any one of the four live to directly tell the story of the tragedy. How then.did the jury — bound as they were under the court’s charge to gauge the quality of this young girl’s acts solely by what she herself did or did not do — determine that she did not in fact see that train coming- in time to have notified the young boy driver so that he could have stopped his automobile soon enough to avoid the collision? In this absence of ans-thing to the contrary, how could they determine that she did not so see the train1 and notify the boy, and that he either failed to heed the warning in time or attempted to beat the train across? There being thus no testimony whatever touching the matter, the answer must be by conjecture, surmise, or inference alone. And the only basis for a conclusion so drawn, as appears to us, after a most careful examination of the statement of facts, is the single fact of the occurrence of the collision. In other words,* the accident did happen at the time, place, and in the surroundings shown, and from that fact the jury concluded that this girl, out for a ride with her companions as invitees for that purpose of the young man driver, must have been negligent in not seeing the train in time to have, by her own action, caused it to be averted.

Under the well-settled authority, however, contributory negligence will not be presumed from the mere fact of accident or injury (Railway Co. v. Crump [Tex. Civ. App.] 212 S. W. 827), but the defendant must prove both that plaintiff was negligent and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury (Railway Co. v. Eaton [Tex. Civ. App.] 222 S. W. 318).

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 1112, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salter-v-galveston-h-s-a-ry-co-texapp-1926.