Southern Pac. Co. v. Evans

183 S.W. 117, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1916
DocketNo. 546.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 183 S.W. 117 (Southern Pac. Co. v. Evans) 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 Pac. Co. v. Evans, 183 S.W. 117, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 142 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Evans brought this suit to recover of appellant damages resulting from personal injuries sustained by him while he was in the service of appellant as a switch-man working in its yards in Los Angeles, Cal. While engaged in the operation of switching cars in said yard, and while standing upon the brake platform of a car, it is alleged a string of cars was switched onto *118 tie track where lie was working, and struck the car upon the brake platform whereon he was standing, and by the force of the collision the cars were driven close together, and he was caught between the running boards and injured.

As grounds of negligence, plaintiff alleges that the defendant had a rule or custom prohibiting the switching of cuts of cars on any side track without having and maintaining on said cut of cars a switchman whose duty it was to control same, and that the car which was switched and struck against the cut of cars upon which plaintiff was riding was switched at a rapid and dangerous rate of speed without having a switchman on said car, and without giving plaintiff notice or warning of the approach of said car, and that the drawhead or drawheads or coupling appliances of the two cars upon or between which plaintiff was working were out of order, broken, unsafe, and dangerous, old, worn, and defective, and that the running boards on said two cars last mentioned were too long, and extended out over the ends of the cars too far. That by reason of the fact that either one or both of said drawheads between the two ears where plaintiff met with his accident, or some appliance or part of said drawhead or drawheads was old, worn, defective, or out of order, when said two cars were struck by the other moving cut of cars it caused and permitted the drawheads to give way and allowed the cars to come too close together and so close together as to allow and permit an insufficient space to be and remain between the ends of the running boards, and thereby caused plaintiff to be caught between the ends of the running boards and seriously and permanently injured.

The jury was instructed that:

“If you find that while plaintiff was on a cut of cars then being switched and attempting to control the same by the use of the brakes, defendant’s other employés engaged in switching cars with plaintiff, without any notice or warning to him, switched another' cut of ears in on the same side track at a rapid and dangerous rate of speed, if they did, without notice or warning to plaintiff, and without having a switchman riding thereon to control the movement of said cars, if such was a fact and you so find, and that by reason thereof said cut of cars struck the cut on which plaintiff was riding with such force and violence as to cause plaintiff to be thrown from the position he then occupied on the said cars, and caused him to be caught between the ends of the running boards of said two cars and injured, as alleged by him, if such was a fact and you so find, and you further find that defendant and its employés was or were guilty of negligence, as that term has heretofore been defined and explained to you, in switching said cut of cars in on said side track at the rate of speed you find they were being switched, and without any notice or warning to plaintiff, if he had no notice, or warning and none was given him, and without having a switchman stationed on said cut of cars to control the movemént of the same, if there was none, and that such negligence, if any. on the part of the said defendant, or its emnloyés, was the direct and proximate cause of plaintiff’s ■ accident and consequent injury, if any, and you do not find for defendant under another or other paragraph of this charge, then in that event your verdict will be for the plaintiff; or, if you find and believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the drawheads and coupling appliances on one or both of the two cars between which plaintiff was riding was or were defective and out of order, and that defendant failed to use ordinary care to provide and keep reasonably safe such drawheads and coupling appliance and that 'by such failure, if any, defendant was negligent, and such negligence, if any, was the proximate cause of the injury, if any, to plaintiff, alleged by Mm, you will find for the plaintiff, unless you find for the defendant under another or other paragraph of this charge.”

[1] Error is assigned to the submission of any issue of negligence with respect to defective drawheads or coupling appliances because there was no evidence raising such issue.

Plaintiff testified he was on a string of two Pacific Express Company cars Nos. 5298 and 3916 going towards the icehouse when he was directed by the foreman to stop them, which he did with the brakes; he was in between these cars on a brake platform and had reached down with his club to knock the dog off the ratchet, so as to slack the brake when another ear came down and hit the string of cars he was on; it did not couple but rebounded and struck again; when it first struck it drove him backwards between the running boards and when it struck the second time- it caught him between the running boards and crushed him. The brake platforms were on the ends of the two cars and about 18 or 20 inches below the top. Prom my own knowledge, gained in work as a railroad man and switchman in the yards, together with my knowledge of the manner of switching these cars, the P. P. E. Company cars, if the drawheads and coupling appliances are in a reasonably safe condition for use, I will state that in the ordinary switching of cars and allowing them to be struck, when they couple together, these end boards will not come together close enough to catch you. The drawheads hold them apart. They are equipped with a follow plate and springs, and then when the drawhead comes up against the ends of the car the springs keep them apart. * * * These drawheads hold the end beams of the car apart. Unless something gives, in the ordinary switching of ears by means of striking with the other cars, or an engine, it is not possible for them to come close enough together to catch me, a man of my size, between the ends of those two running boards.

D. W. Bowers, an experienced car repairer and former car inspector, testified as an expert as follows:

“If you have two cars coupled together, with the brakes on one of them and the cars are standing still, and you let another car down the same track, just one car run down, and strikes these two cars on the end of one of them, with this car running four miles an hour, if these couplers are in good condition, coupler and coupler appliances are in a reasonably safe condition, that blow will not be sufficient to break *119 anything, if they are in good condition. If the drawheads and coupling appliances are in a reasonably safe condition and you let two cars as I have mentioned be struck by another car running four miles an hour down a 1 per cent, grade, it could not possibly drive them closer together than 18 inches — I mean the running boards. The cars themselves would come about 33 to 36 inehes, just the average of the couplers. That is as close as they could possibly be driven, unless there was something wrong. The defect that would allow the cars to come closer together than 36 inehes would be the coupler head would have to break off, or the coupler would have to be shoved clean under the car — shoved clean through the end sill and shove the coupler back under the car to let them come together.

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Related

Southern Pac. Co. v. De La Cruz
201 S.W. 428 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
Southern Pac. Co. v. Evans
192 S.W. 268 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 S.W. 117, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pac-co-v-evans-texapp-1916.