San Antonio Traction Co. v. Young

141 S.W. 572, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 572 (San Antonio Traction Co. v. Young) 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. Young, 141 S.W. 572, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 458 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

This suit was brought by Earner E. and Annie M. Young for damages against appellant for the death of their minor son, Freddie Young, who was alleged to have been negligently run down and killed by one of appellant’s street cars. The judgment of the jury was $3,500 for each of the plaintiffs, aggregating $7,000.

[1] The first assignment of error is, “The court erred in overruling defendant’s second special exception,” and the proposition thereunder is: “The law does not render the defehdant liable for damages merely because it could have discovered a person’s peril by the exercise of ordinary care, but the peril-of a person in danger must have been actually discovered before such new duty is imposed; and the fact that the court overruled an exception to such an allegation and permitted it to be read to the jury and to remain as a part of the petition was misleading, in that it tended to produce in the minds of the jury the idea that the defendant was liable, if it failed to exercise ordinary care to discover the position of the plaintiffs’ son.” There is no complaint whatever as to- the-court’s charge anywhere in submitting the issues; but, as we understand it, the appellant submits his case upon several theories: First, the supposed error in not sustaining this objection; second, in not granting a new trial because the great preponderance of evidence shows that defendant was not guilty of negligence causing death of the child; the third to the same effect; fourth, the verdict was excessive; fifth, the verdict was the result of passion.

Let us see what was alleged by plaintiff in the paragraph, the portion which the appellant claims was error in the court not to sustain its objection. The paragraph is as follows: “Plaintiffs further aver that at the said intersection of Marshall street and North Flores street it was the duty of defendant’s employés, in charge of said car, to have said car under control, to sound the gong, and keep and maintain a lookout for persons using said streets, and plaintiffs aver that defendant’s said employés in charge of said car knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, that plaintiffs’ son was in a perilous position in time by the use of the means at their command to have stopped said car before striking him, or to have so slowed its speed that he would not have been run down and injured, and defendant’s said employés negligently failed to stop said car or so slow its speed as to prevent striking plaintiffs’ said son and injuring him, but negligently propelled said car against plaintiffs’ son, and negligently dragged his body a considerable distance after he was struck.” In reading the petition as a whole in connection with this paragraph, we cannot see that any harm could come to appellant were its contention cor- *573 reet, which we do not believe, because all the issues were fairly submitted by the court in its charge to the jury, and it was the duty of the jury to be governed by the court’s charge, and it is not shown that the jury were influenced by the allegations in the petition at all, or that the matters complained of were in the manner pointed out submitted to the jury at all. Michael v. Rabe, 120 S. W. 565.

[2-4] The appellant really presents its case under the second and third assignments of error, and they are as follows:

“Second Assignment of Error.
“The court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial, because the great preponderance of the evidence shows that the defendant was not guilty of negligence causing the death of plaintiff’s son, Freddie Young.
“Third Assignment of Error.
“The court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial, because the verdict of the jury is contrary to the law and the ■evidence, in this: the great preponderance of the evidence shows that the plaintiffs’ son, Freddie Young, jumped or ran immediately in front of a moving car, so close thereto that it was impossible for the motorman to have stopped the car in time to have prevented killing him, and that his death was caused by the act of the said Freddie Young in jumping in front of said ear, and not through any negligence on the part of this ■defendant.”

Where the accident happened was the intersection of North Flores and Marshall streets, where there is a schoolhouse. The school had just recessed, and many small children were on the street on their way to •dinner. Some were playing, and they were not conscious of, nor did they appreciate, the ■danger from the approaching cars. On North Flores street is a double track taking-up a good part of the street. On east side is a ditch where sidewalk would ordinarily be, and where accident happened was from three to six feet from curbing of the ditch, and the strip between track and ditch curbing narrows as you go northward on Flores street. Some of the little boys were playing on this narrow strip, and were seen by appellant’s employes a considerable distance before the point was reached. This was the condition as the car was approaching, and the little boy was running and playing across the track, he and the car going in the same ■direction, and, the farther the child went, the narrower became the strip of street between the ditch and the track, and, while thus running and angling across the track with his back to the car, he was knocked down and dragged from 20 to> SO feet, and was killed. There was testimony that the car was crossing at a rapid speed at this intersection and particular place, and not under control. There was testimony that no gong was sounded or alarm given. The child did not look back or know of the approaching car. The dying child said: “Papa, it wasn’t my fault. I couldn’t help it. I didn’t see the car, and didn’t hear it.”

The motorman himself said: “I saw the children had been running hither and thither upon the track and across the track playing. There had not any of them crossed when I got in sight. I suppose I had a plain view there of 100 yards, something like that — 1 expect I had ample time to see 100 yards ahead of me.” He also said a car running five miles an hour could be stopped within five feet. “If I had had 10 feet, I could have stopped the car before striking him, and, if there had been 15 feet, it would have been easy to stop.” The conductor knew a school was there and time to let out for dinner; saw the children there; saw children running after Freddie; thought they were playing some kind of game, was watching the boys. It was shown the car was running fast, and the boy running on the track in front 25 or 30 feet ahead, with his back to the car, running ahead of two or three boys running along the ditch after him. The car did not ring the bell or give any sound. This is, in substance, part of plaintiffs’ testimony. The motorman testified when he first saw the boy he was on the sidewalk; crowd of boys on the sidewalk; did not know he was going to get on the track; jumped off sidewalk, was right up against the fender. When he first discovered that he was going to get on the track, reversed car and did all he could to stop it, and applied brakes. The car ran about five or five and a half, or six feet, something like that after the boy got on the track. The conductor testified to the same effect, as did passengers on the car, also that signals were given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 572, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-traction-co-v-young-texapp-1911.