St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Ford

121 S.W. 709, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 521, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 709 (St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Ford) 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
St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Ford, 121 S.W. 709, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 521, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 544 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

By his petition the appellee claimed that while in the service of appellant as head brakeman of its local freight train, and performing his switching duties at the time, he sustained serious personal injuries occurring to him by being run against and upon by a locomotive then being operated by the appellant company on its track at Jester, Texas, alleged to have been directly caused by his foot becoming wedged and fastened between two of the ties in the main track near the switch stand, through the negligence of appellant in having and permitting the said ties at the said place to be and remain exposed and protruding above the surface of the ground between the rails, and arranged on the ground at that place so irregularly spaced, and not properly surfaced with dirt, as that a man’s foot would become wedged and fastened between the same. It was further alleged that appellant negligently caused and permitted quantities of grass to grow and remain in the track at that particular place in such manner as to prevent appellee and other trainmen from discerning the depth between the ties at that place or the spacing between them, which condition of the track at that place greatly imperiled the safety of ap *525 pellee and other trainmen while they were engaged in the performance of their duties, and all of which was known to appellant. The appellant' answered by general denial, a plea of assumed risk and' contributory negligence. The case was tried to a jury and a verdict was returned in favor of the appellee for $20,000, and in accordance with the verdict judgment was entered for appellee.

The evidence in the record substantially shows, and we make the finding of fact, that at the time of his injury appellee was in t'he service of appellant as head brakeman of its westbound local freight train. At Jester, a stopping station, appellant has and maintains a spur track on the south side of and extending west from its junction with its main track. The main track runs east and west. The switch stand for the spur was south of the track. In twelve feet east of the switch block for the side-track is the west edge of a public road running north and south across the main line track. In the afternoon of the day that the appellee was injured his train arrived at Jester and stopped about a ear length east of the public road crossing for the purpose of incorporating in the main train the loaded box car that stood on the spur about ninety feet west from the switch stand. It was the duty of appellee to operate the switch and couplers so that the engine could head in on the spur and couple t'o the car and bring it to the main line, when it was to be placed in the train to the rear of the engine. The appellee got off the engine, where he was riding, and went direct to the car on the spur, and worked and arranged its automatic coupler so that it would operate, unlocked and threw the derailer located on the spur, then went directly to the switch stand and set the switch for the spur track. Upon setting the switch he gave the cut-off signal to the rear brakeman, which meant for the rear brakeman to cut the engine loose from the main train. Appellee then, after giving the signal, at once started east upon the main track to meet the engine as it moved toward the spur and t'o mount the pilot of the engine for the purpose of opening and adjusting the knuckle of the coupler on the pilot so it would operate, while riding to the car. The engine was old, and the knuckles of its front coupling operated badly; it had to be adjusted by hand in order to couple the car. About the time appellee started toward the engine it, on signal by the rear brakeman, began to move toward him, and it was then appellee’s duty, and it was customary in such situation, to meet the pilot upon the track, mount it in front by stepping upon a foot-rest, or step, kept on it for that purpose by appellant, and t'o ride it to the car, adjust the knuckle and see that the coupling was properly made. When appellee reached a point between the rails about four feet west of the road crossing, or about eight feet east" of the switch block, his right foot went down into a space or hole between two ties, and by reason of the toe of his boot resting against one tie while the heel pressed against the other, his foot was clamped and fastened between the ties so that he could not extricate it before the pilot of the engine reached him. The engine was moving towards him at three or four miles per hour, and was at or about the road crossing when his foot became fastened. When his foot became fastened he halloaed for the engine to stop, but it came on. When the pilot reached him he grabbed with both hands *526 to an iron rod on top of the pilot-beam, 'and at the same time placed his left foot on the pilot-st'ep or foohrest in an effort to pull his foot loose and get upon the pilot; but the edge of the pilot struck and crushed his right leg, his left foot slipped from the pilot-step to the track and that leg was crushed by the pilot. Both legs went back under the pilot of the moving engine, and, holding to the iron rod with his hands he was dragged in that position along the track about fifty feet before the' engine was stopped. There was some conflict in the evidence as to whether appellee caught his foot in between the ties in the middle of the track or fastened it between the ties on the outside of the south rail. The appellant contended that the latter happened, and the appellee that the former happened. The conflict was settled by the verdict of the jury in favor of appellee; and as the evidence fully warrants the finding, we assume the truth of the jury’s finding. The evidence established that the appellant’s main track was generally surfaced between the rails at stations and about switches; that the place in the main track where appellee’s foot became fastened in the track, about eight feet east of the switch block, the preponderance of the evidence shows was not surfaced between the rails, but that the spaces between the ties were about three inches deep and the ties were irregularly spaced and Bermuda grass thickly growing between them. The grass obscured the spaces and partly covered the ties. There is evidence that “some of the ties near that place were not straight, but seem to have slipped so that the ends were close together” and the intervening spaces were not filled to the top of the ties but left the ties protruding above. Appellee was shown to have been an adult and a brakeman in the service of the appellant for about eighteen months, but had served principally on through trains. He had been on the local run, which included Jester, less than three weeks. It was shown that he had never had occasion to operate the switch or use the spur-track at Jester before the time of the injury, excepting once when his crew “kicked” a car on to that track and left it to be loaded with wood. It was established that until his foot became fastened in the track appellee had never discovered or ascertained that there were unfilled spaces between the ties in the main track at that place. The Bermuda grass growing thickly in these spaces and partly covering the ties made it appear, upon a casual observation, that the spaces were filled.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 709, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 521, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-railway-co-v-ford-texapp-1909.