Southern Kansas Ry. Co. of Texas v. Barnes

173 S.W. 880, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1915
DocketNo. 699.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 880 (Southern Kansas Ry. Co. of Texas v. Barnes) 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
Southern Kansas Ry. Co. of Texas v. Barnes, 173 S.W. 880, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 21 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

The appellee, Thomas Barnes, as the personal representative of the estate of A. P. Barnes, deceased, instituted this suit against the Southern Kansas Railway Company of Texas, in the district court of Roberts County, Tex., upon an agreed change of venue to Lipscomb county, the cause was tried to a jury in the district court of the latter county, resulting in a verdict against the appellant railway company in the sum of $2,500. The deceased, A. P. Barnes, at the time of his death, was a brakeman upon one of the railway company's freight trains engaged in interstate commerce. A short time previously to his death the train upon which he was engaged as a brakeman, consisting of a locomotive engine and about 63 freight cars, engine, and caboose, on the night of the 16th of August, 1912, in moving from the east, had gone in onto a passing track at a point east of the depot in the town of Higgins, moving westward, for the purpose of permitting an eastbound passenger train, seven cars, and engine, then about due, on its journey to Kansas City, Mo., to pass said freight train; said passenger train at said time also engaged in interstate commerce. The main track at the town of Higgins is in a general direction east and west, with the east beginning of the passing track at a point, according to certain testimony, a quarter of a mile, and, from other testimony, a half mile, from the depot; said passing track, the best we can infer from the record, being from 90 to 100 car lengths east and west, immediately south and parallel to the main track. According to the defendant railway company's testimony, the particular freight train upon which the deceased, A. P. Barnes, was engaged, headed in westwardly on the passing track, and the engineer spotted the train with the engine at a water crane for the purpose of obtaining water, and, according to its contention, with the whole of said train upon the passing track, with the way car not entirely clear, in that it was a few feet east of the clearance post toward the frogs; that the conductor, Heath, in charge of said freight train, at the time the engineer had stopped at the water crane, left the deceased, A. P. Barnes, at the rear end of said train near the caboose, and standing on the ground between the caboose and the main track, for the purpose of protecting that part of the train; that the conductor walked the length of the train to the engine, informing Burke, the engineer in charge, that the rear end of said train was not quite in the clear, directing him to clear the main track, and the engineer thereafter moved his train westwardly on up the passing track, and, after the passenger train going east had come in on the main track, said freight train proceeded on its journey to Canadian.

The conductor, Heath, in charge of said freight train, testified that, when his train headed in on the passing track at the east, he closed and locked the switch at that end, and after the passenger train came in on the main track, headed east, that he also closed the switch at the west end, giving the "highball" to the engineer for the continuance of the Journey; that after this was done he noticed the absence of the rear brakeman Barnes from the rear of the train, however, assuming that, on account of previous trouble with hot boxes, said Barnes was at the head of the train, and after arriving at Canadian, the first stop, he telegraphed back the information, which caused an investigating party from Higgins to go to the switch at the east end, resulting in the discovery of the remains of said Barnes.

Keeping in mind the southerly curvature of the switch deviating from the main track, the best we can deduce from this record is that the searching party discovered the lantern of the brakeman Barnes standing between two ties and between the north rail of the main track and the north rail of the passing track at some point in the switch where the south curvature and deviation of the passing track from the main track occurs. The deceased's gloves were found practically opposite, with a railroad tie between, between the south rail of the main track and the south rail of the passing track, at some point within the same curvature of the passing track where it deviates from the main track. The trunk and legs of the deceased were found from 60 to 75 feet, according to different distances by different witnesses, on the main track east of the place where the lantern and gloves were situated, and in the following position: The trunk of the body was on the outside of the south rail of the main track (with the head severed therefrom), and the legs between the rails opposite. Between this point and the point where the lantern and gloves were situated, the head of the deceased was discovered, a few inches south of the south rail of the main track. A short distance east of his gloves the deceased's watch was discovered, with the crystal broken, with the stem and chain located further east; and, between the places where the lantern and gloves and the body were situated, pieces of clothing, a pocketbook containing money, and other small articles of personal property, were also discovered — clearly indicating that the body of the deceased had been struck at some point west of where it was found and dragged east by the movement of the train.

East from the depot at Higgins, the main *Page 882 track of the railway company was practically straight and level. For some distance (just what space we are unable to ascertain) at the place where the passing track and the main track are connected, said tracks were partially in a "skeleton" condition; that is, the ballast was not to a standard level, leaving some open space between the bottom of the rails and the roadbed.

The engineer in charge of the passenger engine which killed Barnes testified that at the station of Quinlan, in Oklahoma, after receiving a certain telegram with reference to the matter, hair and blood were discovered on the cow catcher of his engine, and hair was also discovered on a footstep stationed at the right side and the bottom of the pilot.

The plaintiff, appellee here, offered and introduced in evidence an envelope postmarked "St. Louis, Mo., July 6, 12 M. 1912," addressed to "A. P. Barnes, Canadian, Texas," with the return Inscription, "The Durbin Automatic Train Pipe Connector Co., Chemical Bldg., St. Louis, Mo.;" and on the envelope was the following lead pencil writing: "Train started jerk(ed) of (off) way car, broke leg and arm, leg fastened under rail, can't get loose, 14 at depot, light out, can't reach it, bye-bye." The punctuation by commas and the parentheses are ours.

Guy Chelf, a locomotive fireman of the defendant company, introduced as a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he found this particular note in a folded condition with a "little red rock on it," from four to eight feet from the rail, in a clear space, stating that it was "pretty well straight from his lantern" (meaning the deceased's lantern); further saying, "As well as I can recollect, it was out to one side, even with his gloves and lantern."

Lambert Barnes, an older brother of A. P. Barnes, testified:

"I have seen him (meaning A. P. Barnes) write many times. I think I have seen him try to write and looked at his writing where he did not have facilities to write with — did not have a place where he could put it down on a table, or where the light was not good, or it was dark — but I do not remember any particular instance. * * * I know his handwriting and have read a number of his letters. That note that you hand me * * * looks to me like his handwriting. I do not have any doubt about it. * * * I believe it to be."

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Related

Texas Electric Ry. Co. v. Wooten
173 S.W.2d 463 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1943)
Sears v. Texas & N. O. Ry. Co.
266 S.W. 400 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 880, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-kansas-ry-co-of-texas-v-barnes-texapp-1915.