Schaff v. Copass

262 S.W. 234, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 518
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 1924
DocketNo. 6732. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 262 S.W. 234 (Schaff v. Copass) 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
Schaff v. Copass, 262 S.W. 234, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 518 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

McCLENDON, C. J.

[1] This suit was instituted on bebalf of Carl Copass by bis mother, Mrs. Annie Stephens, as next friend, against C. E. Schaff, in his capacity as receiver of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company of Texas, to recover compensatory damages for personal injuries sustained by Copass on the night of August 14, 1922, as a result of being run over by an engine operated by the receiver. Copass had fallen asleep while seated on the track, and therefore, under the doctrine announced in Railway v. Shiftlet, 94 Tex. 131, 58 S. W. 945, was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, which precluded recovery except on the theory of discovered peril. The cause was tried to a jury upon special issues, who found that the fireman and engineer discovered Copass on the track in time, hy exercising ordinary care, to avoid striking him, and assessed his damage at $20,000. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff in accordance with these findings. The case is properly before us upon appeal from this judgment duly perfected by the receiver.

Fourteen propositions are urged by appellant as grounds for reversal. These propositions present the following contentions:

' First. That the evidence will not support any recovery.

Second. That the finding that the engineer discovered the peril of Copass in time to avert the injury was without support in the evidence.

Third. That the second special issue was erroneous in various respects.

Fourth. Th,at appellant’s second requested special issue was erroneously refused.

^ Fifth. That it was error to charge the jury that any fact in issue before them might be established by circumstantial or direct evidence, or both.

Sixth. .That the court erroneously admitted in evidence a picture of an electric headlight shining down a railroad right of way.

Seventh. That certain remarks in the argument of plaintiff’s counsel were prejudicial to defendant.

' We will consider these contentions in the above order.

[2] In deciding the correctness of the first contention, we must view the evidence and the deductions which may properly be drawn from it most favorably to the plaintiff. From this viewpoint we make-the following statement of the evidence:

The occurrence happened a little after midnight, at a place known as Pershing switch, on the outskirts of the city of Austin, whore the defendant’s line of railway joins the Houston & Texas Central or Southern Pacific line. For convenience we will use initials in referring to the several railway! ■ companies. The S. P. line at this point runs east and west, and is used from the switch at Pershing west by the M., K. & T. trains. A public road crosses the S. P. track at right angles, immediately west of this switch. This road is tarviated, and about 40 or 50 feet wide. Immediately east of the road is a cattle guard, and just east of the cattle guard is the switch stand, which is situated on the left or north side of the track. From this point the M., K. & T. rails diverge from the S. P. rails toward the north and upon a curve. This curve is a continuation of a curve of the S. P. rails extending west from the switch for a distance of several hundred feet. It is a two degree curve, and practically uniform. The M., K. & T. north-bound trains leaving Austin over the S. P. line and passing on to the M., K. & T. line at Pershing switch travel east on the S. P. line until the engine reaches a point immediately west of the road in question, where the train is stopped; the porter goes ahead and throws the Pershing switch; the train then proceeds east across the road on to the M., K. & T. track; the porter boards the train when it reaches him; and the rear brakeman relines the switch, and then catches the rear car of the train, which is not entirely stopped, but slowed down, for this purpose. On the night in question Copass, a youth of 19 years, who lived at Temple, and who had just been discharged from the state .militia, went out to Pershing switch for the purpose of stealing a ride to his home at Temple. He waited some time for a train, and finally crossed the cattle guard to the east of the road and sat down on the track, either at the frog, which intersects the north rail of the S. P. line and the south rail of the M., K. & T. line, or some 23 feet beyond the frog on the south M., K. & T. rail. In this position he went to sleep, and was not awakened until the train in question was practically upon him. He endeavored to get out of the way, but was not successful, and his feet were run over and mashed, resulting in serious permanent injuries. The train in question was a passenger train, consisting of 13 coaches. The engine was some 80 feet in length, the day coaches 60 and the sleepers 70 feet in length. The length of the entire train, exclusive of the engine, was about 900 feet. According to the engineer’s testimony, the equipment upon the train was, as he expressed it, “100 per cent, efficient”; each coach was equipped with air, and the brakes in perfect order. The usual procedure above outlined was carried out in the instant case; the train was stopped just west of the tarviated part of the roadway, which placed the front of the engine approximately 75 feet west of the switch; the porter went forward and threw the switch and gave the 'signal to the fireman, who was on the left or north side of the engine, and he in turn gave the starting signal to the engineer. The porter testified *237 that lie Aid not see anything on the track ahead of the train. The testimony of the fireman was to the effect that he was keeping a lookout ahead from the time the train started until Copass was struck, but that he did not see any object on the track until just at the time the front part of the engine was taking the M., K. & T. rails, at which time he saw an object on the track just passing out of his view behind the running board or front part of the engine. He also testified that he was keeping a lookout before the train stopped, but saw no object on the track. The following quotations give the substance of his testimony concerning his part in the affair:

“The picture you hand me I have seen before, and it correctly represents the situation there as I have seen it. About the time the engine was leaving the H. & T. C. track going onto the Katy track I saw something on the track ahead of us. The object that I saw on the track was in my view for just a little bit. The turning of the engine on the curve and the running board in front of the engine naturally got the object out of my sight in a very little bit, The turning of the engine made the engine come between me and the object. The object was indistinct, and it did not stand out clear. It was a small looking object to me —looked to be a very small thing. When I noticed the object on the track I hallooed to the engineer that there was something on the track, and then I went to his side. I would not be positive how far it was from where I was in the engine cab over to the engineer’s side, but just about two steps, one down off.my box and then one across the cab; just the width of the cab. The engineer sits on one side of the cab and I sit on the other. I told the engineer when I got over to where he was that I thought there was something on the track.

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Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 234, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaff-v-copass-texapp-1924.