San Antonio Traction Co. v. Levyson

113 S.W. 569, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 122, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 317
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 569 (San Antonio Traction Co. v. Levyson) 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. Levyson, 113 S.W. 569, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 122, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 317 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

— The appellees, who are the widow and children of Paul Levyson, deceased,- sued the appellant for causing his death by negligently running one of its street cars over him. The negligence charged was: (1) in failing to sound the gong; (2) in failing to have the car equipped with a fender; (3) in failing to have the car under complete control, as required by city ordinances; (4) in failing to keep a lookout; and (5) in running the car at a greater rate of speed than allowed by city ordinances.

The defendant, after interposing general and special exceptions to plaintiffs’ petition, answered by a general denial, specially denied that it was guilty of any of the several acts of negligence alleged, and pleaded contributory negligence of the deceased in stepping immediately in front of the moving car, alleging that he, while waiting for and intending to board defendant’s northbound car, when he knew that it was coming, stepped immediately in front of the same; and that in so doing he was guilty of contributory negligence, which caused his death.

The trial of the case resulted in a judgment for the appellees in the sum of $7,000.

As the first assignment complains of the court’s refusing defendant’s motion, upon the close of plaintiff’s testimony, to instruct a verdict in *124 its favor; the second, of the refusal of a requested special instruction to the jury to return a verdict for defendant; the third, of the failure of the court to grant a new trial upon the ground that the undisputed evidence showed the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in going upon defendant’s track immediately in front of a moving car; and the fifth, of its failure to grant a new trial upon the ground that the great preponderance of the evidence showed deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in going upon the track immediately in front of a moving car — the findings of fact will determine the merit of each of the four assignments mentioned, and they will all be disposed of in connection with our

Conclusions of Fact. — About two o’clock in the afternoon of July 10, 1905, Paul Levyson, the husband of appellee, Fannie Levyson, and the father of the other appellees, was struck, knocked down, run over and killed by one of appellant’s electric street cars at the intersection of Guenther and South Alamo Streets. At that time appellant maintained and operated an electric street car line which ran along South Alamo Street, which is intersected and crossed by Guenther Street. It then maintained two car tracks along said street extending south across Guenther Street to a point near a bridge across San Antonio River, at which point one of the tracks is terminated by a switch which connects it with the other. The distance between the inner rails of these tracks where Guenther Street is crossed, is four and nine-tenths feet, which continues south nearly to the point of their convergence. The cars going north ran on the track on the east side of the street, and those running south on the west side. The distance from the south side of Guenther Street to the end of the switch which connects the two tracks is one hundred and fourteen feet. The length of the switch is thirty-four and three-tenths feet. The distance from the switch to the bridge is sixty-four and seven-one-hundredths feet, the entire distance from the south line of Guenther Street to the bridge being two hundred and thirteen feet; and the bridge is nearly one hundred feet long. The sidewalk on the east side of Guenther Street is six feet wide, and the distance from its inner curb to the railway track is twenty-eight feet; on its east side, the sidewalk is seven and one-half feet wide and the distance from the curb is thirty-five feet. There was, and had been a long time prior to Levyson’s death, a bench under a shade tree on the southwest corner of the intersection of the streets, used by persons waiting to take passage on defendant’s cars, and a telephone pole just north of the bench. The custom of the defendant company was to stop its cars to let off and take on passengers after its car crosses a street. In accordance with this custom its cars running north into the business part of the city would stop after crossing Guenther Street at its northeast corner, and passengers waiting at the bench under the shade to take a northbound car would have to cross over the street diagonally to that corner in order to get aboard. There was a clear view from the southwest corner of Guenther Street of the street car track south to and across the bridge, ánd further, until it turns a corner; but such view does not extend from the' bench, because obstructed by a fence, nor from the telephone pole; and the motorman on the northbound car would *125 have had a clear view of anyone crossing the street diagonally, unless obstructed by a car on the other track.

The deceased, who resided not far from the point of intersection of the streets, when going to his place of business on defendant’s cars, usually took passage at this place. On the day of his death, after eating his dinner, he started from his home to his place of business, intending to take one of defendant’s ears running north, at the intersection of Guenther and South Alamo Streets. A few minutes after-wards he was seen by Mr. Guenther in a sitting posture, leaning against the telephone pole, talking to someone on the adjacent bench. A car going south had evidently just passed, though not observed by the witness, or if it was, it had escaped his recollection when he testified upon the trial. The witness then saw him arise from where he was sitting and start diagonally across the street towards its northeast corner, where defendant’s cars going north usually stopped to let off and take on passengers. The witness did not notice whether he walked or ran, but supposed he moved pretty fast; though he didn’t notice deceased all the time from when he saw him get up. His attention was called next to him by hearing a shriek and then he saw the accident. He observed no change in the speed of the car before it struck Levyson; and he said that it must have been south of the spur when deceased started across. He had no recollection whether he heard the gong sounded or not. This witness saw the northbound car stop after it struck Levyson.

Another witness, who visited the scene of the accident a few moments after it occurred, testified: “When I got down there the body was under the car . . . kinder doubled up, with the wheels touching against a portion of the neck and head. The body was all doubled up like it had been rolled" and mashed. ... A man named Turner lives there on the corner, and the car was just a little south of his front gate, very near the corner. I noticed three blood marks on the ground, one distinctly visible about the middle of the street. The blood spot I observed particularly was right about the middle of Guenther Street and in the middle of the east rail. And in the middle of the track near where this blood spot was, about two feet from it, it started. It was just like you had rolled something. The body lay somewhere north of the crossing, under the first or second truck of the .car. I remember when the body was taken out- Yesterday morning ... I stepped it off to see — I had been told I would be called as a witness in the case, and I stepped it off, and it was seventeen full steps from the place in the middle of the street to the place where the body was — I remember pretty definitely where the body was.”

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 569, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 122, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-traction-co-v-levyson-texapp-1908.