San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Singletary

251 S.W. 325, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 157
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1923
DocketNo. 6895. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 325 (San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Singletary) 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
San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Singletary, 251 S.W. 325, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 157 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

The appeal is from a judgment against the railway company in favor of Mrs. Singletary for damages occasioned to her by the death of her son, D. H. Singletary, in a crossing accident near Kenedy, in Karnes county, on September 2, 1920 at 4:40 p. m. The amount of the verdict and judgment was $7,000.

The deceased had undertaken for another to drive a Ford automobile from San Benito, in Cameron county, to Ballinger, in Runnels county. Somewhere en route he had picked up D. A. Nugent, who was in the car with him at the time of the accident. Both were instantly killed. The accident was witnessed by no one except the fireman on the locomotive which collided with the automobile. The only testimony in the case bearing on the question of speed was that the automobile was running 20 or 25, and the train 35 or 40, miles an hour. The collision occurred at a public crossing. The train was moving *Page 326 north, as was the automobile, until it turned sharply east and undertook the crossing.

The public road parallels the railway for a mile or more before turning at right angles across the tracks. These tracks are 50 feet from the public road, which is 50 feet wide. If the car traveled along the center of the highway, it would thus be 75 feet from the railway tracks. The highway paralleling the railway turned sharply both to the right and to the left opposite the place of the accident, so that one traveling north on this highway, as deceased was, could turn to the east or to the west according to his choice. If he turned west, he left the railway behind him. Turning east, as in this instance, he would cross the railway 50 feet east of the turn. The sharp turn of this road is heralded to the approaching traveler by a large advertising sign, spread squarely across the way.

The whistling board was some 500 or 600 yards south of the crossing. The undisputed testimony shows, and the jury found, that the locomotive whistle was sounded at this board, and the undisputed testimony shows, although there was no jury finding thereon, that the locomotive bell was rung continuously from this board to the crossing. When this whistle was sounded the travelers were somewhere on the public road 50 or 75 feet from the railway tracks, and between the train and the crossing, and while, of course, there was no testimony that the travelers heard or did not hear the whistle, it was conclusively shown that it was heard by a number of persons, some of them as much as three-quarters of a mile up the tracks, and hence almost directly in line with and beyond the travelers.

The jury found that appellant permitted the weeds to be in its right of way to such an extent that the deceased could not in the exercise of ordinary care see the approach of the train "in time for the collision to have been avoided"; that the train was running at an excessive rate of speed; that, although the train operatives sounded the whistle for the crossing as required by the statutes, they "failed to give such warnings of the approach of the train as a person using ordinary care would have done"; that these acts or omissions constituted negligence, and each caused or proximately contributed to cause the accident.

The jury further found that before going upon the crossing the deceased looked, listened, and "did every other act for the purpose of discovering whether or not a train was approaching said crossing." There was no evidence, however, to support these findings. Both occupants of the automobile were instantly killed in the accident as stated, and thus their lips were sealed. No one saw the automobile or its occupants prior to the collision, except the fireman on the locomotive, and it is from his evidence alone that any inference may be drawn or finding made. This witness testified that he first saw the automobile about the time the train passed the whistling board, and the whistle sounded; that at that time the car was ahead of the train, moving along the public road paralleling the railroad at about 25 miles an hour; that it continued at about the same speed until it reached the crossroads, when it turned to the east at about 20 miles an hour, and, without checking its speed, moved towards and upon the crossing, immediately in front of the on-coming train. This constitutes the whole of the evidence relating to the conduct of the occupants of the automobile prior to the accident. To this evidence alone could the jury look in reaching its finding thereon. Certainly it did not in any event warrant the finding actually returned. If the jury were warranted in reaching any conclusion, or drawing any inference, from this evidence, it is the conclusion or inference that, whether the occupants of the car saw the train or not, they heard the whistle when it was sounded a few hundred feet away so loudly that it was heard by half a dozen others three-quarters of a mile beyond, and in almost a direct line with them; that, instead of slackening, they continued to maintain the rate of speed at which they were traveling, and, in disregard of the obvious danger, undertook to "beat" the train to the crossing. Such attempts are not unknown among automobile drivers. It is no less a matter of common knowledge that such attempts are undertaken than that they are sometimes unsuccessful.

The train operatives and the occupants of the automobile, of course, had an equal right to the use of the crossing, subject to the duty resting upon each to so exercise the right as not to unreasonably interfere with the other's use of it, and to exercise due care to avoid injuring the other. These duties of automobilists and railway operatives, are reciprocal, and rest equally upon both, although, since both cannot pass an intersection at the same time, one or the other must have the right of precedence, which common sense and the public welfare dictate should be accorded to railway trains. This is the general rule, recognized and accorded by the public. Huddy on Automobiles, § 556; Baker v. Collins (Tex. Civ. App.) 199 S.W. 519.

A railroad track is of itself a proclamation of danger, imposing upon the traveler at the railroad crossing a positive duty of using care to avoid trains. In approaching such crossing it is his duty to assume a present danger, which includes the immediate approach of a train within a dangerous distance, and "the man who, knowing it to be a railroad crossing, approaches it, is careless unless he approaches it as if it were *Page 327 dangerous." Huddy, § 550. The traveler is charged with notice of this danger, which is being impressed more and more upon the public mind by constantly recurring tragedies such as this. The Legislature of Texas long since recognized this danger by enacting a statute requiring train operatives to signal their approach to crossings by both bell and whistle, and the courts are, and ought to be, strict in penalizing the railroads for failure to comply with this statute. Since the advent of automobiles, and prompted no doubt by the resulting alarming increase of crossing accidents, the Legislature enacted a statute in 1917 (chapter 207, § 17 [Vernon's Ann.Pen. Code Supp. 1918, art. 820l]) imposing a reciprocal duty upon the automobilist by requiring him upon approaching, and at not less than 30 feet from, a railroad crossing the view of which is "either wholly or partially obscured," to reduce the speed of his automobile "to a speed not to exceed six miles per hour before making the said crossing." If both the railway operative and the automobile driver would in all cases comply with these statutory requirements, such tragedies as the one involved would never occur.

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251 S.W. 325, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-a-p-ry-co-v-singletary-texapp-1923.