San Antonio Traction Co. v. Hauskins

148 S.W. 1100, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 148 S.W. 1100 (San Antonio Traction Co. v. Hauskins) 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 Traction Co. v. Hauskins, 148 S.W. 1100, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1138 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

Nellie B. Hauskins and her husband, J. E. Hauskins, sued appellant for $30,000 damages, alleged to have been sustained by her on account of injuries received while alighting from one of appellant’s cars. The grounds of negligence alleged were; (1) That the car was started up while she was alighting, causing her to be thrown to the ground and pavement with great force and violence. (2) That the car was stopped where passengers alighting from the same would step upon a portion of the street which was rough, uneven, and filled with holes, and that when Mrs. Haus-kins alighted from said car she stepped into a hole or depression, in consequence of which she was thrown to the ground and injured. That by reason of such condition of the street it became the duty of defendant and its employes to inform Mrs. Haus-kins thereof and to assist her in alighting in safety, but that they failed to so warn or assist her. The defendant answered by general and special denial, and further specially answered that her injuries, if any, were received after she had left the car and had ceased to be a passenger, and because of the negligent and careless manner in which she walked, and by her negligently stepping into a hole in the street after she had ceased to be a passenger, and without any fault on the part of defendant. The trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for $2,000, from which defendant appealed.

The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to give special charge No. 4, requested by defendant, as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that the car was not started up while the plaintiff Mrs. Hauskins was in the act of alighting, and that she alighted safely from said car, and after she had alighted she turned and walked away and stepped into a hole in the street a step or two away from the place where she had alighted, and that she was thereby caused to fall, then you will return a verdict for the defendant.” The assignment is submitted as a proposition, also the following proposition: “The only duty that *1102 defendant owed plaintiff; was to use the care required by law to see that she safely alighted. It was not responsible for the condition of the street or for her safety, after she had alighted from the'car, and if she had safely alighted and stepped into a hole in the street after she turned to walk away, and was thereby injured, the defendant would not be liable. This issue was not separately submitted by the court in its main charge, and therefore the defendant was entitled to have the charge given.”

The court gave the following defensive charges: “If, however, you find that at the time Mrs. Nellie B. Hauskins attempted to leave said car, said ear had been stopped, and you further find that said car was not again put in motion until after Mrs. Nellie B. Hauskins had left the same, then you are instructed that plaintiffs are not entitled to recover under the first paragraph of this charge, and you will so find. Xou are further charged that if you find that the place where the defendant stopped its car for the purpose of discharging and receiving its passengers was a reasonably safe place for passengers to alight from said' ear, and that plaintiff alighted from said car safely, and that after she alighted therefrom and was walking away from said car she stepped into a hole in the street and was thereby caused to fall, and as a result thereof was injured, then you will find for the defendant under .the second paragraph of this charge.”

[1] We think that portion of the charge last quoted was erroneous in placing the burden upon defendant of showing 'not only .that plaintiff alighted from the car safely and after she alighted therefrom .and was walking away she stepped in a hole in the street, but also that the place where defendant stopped its car for the purpose of discharging and receiving its passengers was a reasonably safe, place to alight. Appellees admit in their brief “that, if the place where it stopped the car was a reasonably safe place for passengers to alight, it was entitled to a verdict on that issue, regardless of whether Mrs. Hauskins alighted safely from said car.” This is an admission that the defensive charge by the court was too burdensome upon defendant, because such charge required much more than a finding that it was a reasonably safe place to alight, in order to find for defendant.

[2, 3] We believe that under the pleadings in this case defendant was entitled to have the special charge given, and that same would not have been upon the weight of the evidence.

Appellee says the giving of such charge would have been error because it is not the law that Mrs. Hauskins could not recover if she alighted on the ground in safety and then took one step into a hole in the street, which caused her to fall and injure herself. The proposition of law involved in such contention is not before us for consideration in this case, because the pleadings do not raise any issue of stepping into a hole, after’ alighting safely, but only the issue that when she alighted she stepped into the hole-Nor does the charge of the court submit such issue, and we see no reason why the defensive charge should go further than to require the finding of facts negativing the cause of action as alleged.

Counsel for appellee urge various reasons why the refusal of the special charge should not be deemed reversible error; but, as the same question will not arise upon another trial, and we think the case should be reversed under the second assignment, we will merely say -that we think the assignment shows error.

[4] The second assignment complains of the charge; the first proposition being that the court should not have submitted the issue whether Mrs. Hauskins stepped into the hole or depression when she alighted from the car, because there was no evidence justifying the submission' of said issue.

We find that Mrs. Hauskins did not testify she stepped into a hole, but that just as she was about to alight from the car it was started, and that threw her to the ground.

J. C. Shannon, who was clerk in the drug store into which Mrs. Hauskins was taken, after she sprained her ankle, testified she stated that the conductor was not to blame; that, she stepped into a hole and sprained her ankle; that she stepped to the ground, and after she stepped to the ground she sprained her ankle.

Alexander Chaves, another clerk in such, store, testified that upon said occasion Mrs. Hauskins said something to the effect that she stepped into a hole in Soledad street and turned her foot and sprained her ankle, and it was not the conductor’s fault.

The witness Fitzgerald was very positive that he saw Mrs. Hauskins get off the car, and that she made two steps after getting off the car before she fell. At one place in his testimony appears the statement that she made only one step after getting off, but upon being questioned later he was sure he did not make such statement, and that it was two steps. We copy the following statement: “She made two steps, just natural steps. No she did not step off the car right down into this, stepped right close to it, made two steps after she stepped off, stepped over toward the drug store. Well, there was the hole.” At one place he said: “She was going toward the curbing there on Soledad street.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 1100, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-traction-co-v-hauskins-texapp-1912.