Southwest Stone Co. v. Symons

237 S.W.2d 380, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1529
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 1951
Docket15203
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 380 (Southwest Stone Co. v. Symons) 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
Southwest Stone Co. v. Symons, 237 S.W.2d 380, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1529 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

McDONALD, Chief Justice.

This suit arose out of a collision between a truck and a train at a railroad crossing. Appellee Symons, the owner and operator of the truck, recovered judgment for $4143.73 on a favorable jury verdict. Appellant has appealed, presenting 66 points of error in a brief containing 146 typewritten pages. We shall undertake the task of discussing the contentions of the parties in an opinion of reasonable length.

The collision occurred at night. Appel-lee charged that the crossing was unusually hazardous because the approach of the train was obscured by a low hill, some trees and other vegetation growing between the highway and the railroad track, and the angle at which the train crossed the highway. The first eight issues submitted to the jury presented the question of unusually hazardous crossing, and the questions of negligence of appellant in failing to provide a flagman, signal light, or signal bell at the crossing, and the accompanying questions of proximate cause. At the time of the collision appellee was traveling in a northerly direction along the highway and the train was proceeding in a westerly direction.

The train in question consisted of an engine and six cars being pushed ahead of the engine. The cars, in which stone or gravel were usually hauled, were low cars, somewhat less in height than the engine. The leading car of the train, as it proceeded west, collided with appellee’s truck. Some of the witnesses referred to the most westerly car of the train as the front or foremost car of the train, others referred to it as the rear of the train. We shall refer to it as the front car, and to the end of the car which collided with the truck as the front end of the car, because of the direction in which the train was then traveling.

Appellee also charged appellant with negligence in two other respects, one being the failure of appellant to have sufficient light on the front end of the car to warn appellee of the approach of the train, the other being the failure of a flagman or switchman who was riding on the front car to use his lantern in a proper manner to warn appellee of the approach of the train. Issues were submitted to the jury and answered favorably to appellee on these charges.

Issues of contributory negligence were submitted to the jury and answered favorably to appellee.

Some of appellant’s points of error are to the effect that there was no evidence to support the verdict, that appellant should have had an instructed verdict, that appel-lee was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and that the various acts of negligence found by the jury could not, as a matter of law, have been the proximate cause of the collision. We are required by many decisions, as against these contentions, to consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, and in stating the facts we shall do so with this rule in mind.

Appellant’s contention with respect to the question of unusually hazardous crossing, briefly put, is that the crossing was open and visible to travelers along the highway, and that there was nothing to obstruct a view of the train as it approached and crossed the highway. Numerous photographs were introduced in evidence and appellant argues that these photographs, together with other evidence, show conclusively that there was nothing unusually dangerous about the crossing. Appellee’s contention is that the photographs relied on by appellant do not show accurately the condition of the crossing at the time of the collision. Appellee says that the photographs were taken in the winter and that the collision occurred in the summer, and that the conditions created by the presence of the trees and other vegetation were materially different at the *384 time of the collision from what they were when the photographs were taken. Appel-lee also says that the evidence shows that the area between the track and the highway was burned off between the time of the collision and the time the photographs were taken, and that some of the. vegetation which existed ;at the time of the collision was destroyed when the area was burned off.

Appellee, and the man who was riding in the, truck with him, both testified that they saw the headlight of the engine, as the truck approached the crossing, about 100 yards east of . the crossing, that they thought the engine was either standing still or going in the other direction, and that they thought the truck would have sufficient time to cross the track in safety ahead of the engine. Both testified that they did not and could not see the six cars which were being pushed ahead of the engine until a brief moment before the collision, when they saw the leading car coming onto the highway within a few feet of appellee’s truck. Their testimony was that appellee brought his truck almost to a complete stop before reaching the crossing, and that ap-pellee then drove ahead when it appeared that the engine was far enough away for appellee to cross ahead of it. They said that they did not see any light on the front car of the train, and that they did not see the flagman or switchman standing on the leading car and did not see him wave a lantern.

Members of the train crew also testified that appellee brought his truck almost to a stop shortly before he reached the track, and then increased his speed as- he started across the track.

Under the circumstances, when we view the testimony which is favorable to the verdict and disregard that which is against it,' as we'are required'to- do, we feel compelled to say that the issue of extra-hazardous crossing was one for the jury to decide. If -appellee’s testimony and that of his companion is believed, appellee could not see the six cars- being pushed ahead of the 'engine because of the conditions above mentioned. ■ The claim of unusually hazardous crossing is not eliminated by the fact that -the headlight of the .engine was visible, nor by the fact that appellee saw the headlight of the engine and knew that a train was in the vicinity of the crossing. The proximate cause of the collision, from appellee’s standpoint, was the fact that the six cars in question, which extended a total distance.of- some three hundred feet ahead of the engine, were hidden from ap-pellee’s view. If the conditions surrounding the crossing were such as to hide this portion of the train, it cannot be said as a matter of law that there was no issue for the jury on the question of extra-hazardous crossing, nor can it be said that the negligence of appellant, predicated on the duties imposed on it by reason of the extra-hazardous nature of the crossing, could not have been the proximate cause of the collision. If the engine, had been the front end of the train, rather than the car three hundred feet ahead of the engine, it could reasonably be concluded from the evidence that appellee and his truck would safely have crossed the track before the engine would have reached the highway.

Certain cases are cited by appellant in which the traveler collided with a train which already occupied the crossing at the time of- the collision. In other words, the traveler ran into the side of a train which was- already across the highway. In those cases it was held that the lack of a flagman or bell or signal light could not have been the proximate cause of the collision, on the theory that if the traveler did not see an object as big as the train itself, across the highway, he would not have seen a flagman or signal light or would not have heard a bell.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 380, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-stone-co-v-symons-texapp-1951.