St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Pope

97 S.W. 534, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 616, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 97 S.W. 534 (St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Pope) 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. Pope, 97 S.W. 534, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 616, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 179 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This is the second appeal in this case by the railAvay company. The nature of the case is so fully and clearly stated in the opinions on the first appeal (82 S. W. Rep., 360, 98 Texas, 535, 86 S. W. Rep., 5) it is deemed unnecessary to reiterate it. The judgment now before us is for $20,000.

The first five assignments complain of the court’s overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial. These assignments, for the purpose of obviating- a separate statement under each, are grouped and presented together in appellant’s brief. As they present different propositions, we are asked not to consider them because violative of rules prescribed for briefing causes. But as they all attack the sufficiency of the evidence -to support the verdict, and much of the testimony is as pertinent to one assignment as to the other, and, in order to deduce conclusions of fact, we must review the evidence any Avay, it will be much more convenient for us in arriving at our conclusions of fact to consider the assignments in connection with the propositions and counter-propositions and statements under them contained in the briefs of either party than it Avould be should Ave ignore them,

*620 The disposition of these five assignments will constitute our conclusions of fact, which will be made in observance of the well-established principle that the most favorable inference which the entire evidence will authorize should be drawn in favor of the verdict.

1. Under the first assignment it is contended that the verdict is contrary to the law and the preponderance of the evidence, in that there is no evidence showing defendant’s employees in charge of its locomotive operated the same other than would have been done by an ordinary prudent person under similar circumstances; that there is no evidence showing that the engineer was guilty of negligence in stopping the train, but that it shows conclusively he stopped the engine and ears in a careful and prudent manner. This assignment is followed by the proposition, that “although there may be sufficient evidence in a case to require the court to submit it to the jury, yet if the verdict rendered thereon is .against the preponderance of the evidence to that degree which shows that manifest injustice has been done, the trial court may and should grant a new trial; and on its failure to do so the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded by this court.”

If the only ground of negligence alleged as plaintiff’s cause of action were that of defendant’s employes in handling the engine or of the engineer in stopping the train, and there were no evidence reasonably tending to prove such act of negligence, unquestionably the motion for a new trial should have been granted for that reason. But it is seen from the pleadings that other grounds of negligence were alleged and from the record that evidence was introduced to sustain them. Therefore, if it should be conceded that there was no evidence tending to show negligence in operating the engine or in stopping the train, it would not follow that a new trial should have been granted on that ground, unless it should further appear that the evidence upon the other grounds of negligence was insufficient to prove them, or, if proven, that appellee’s injuries were not proximately caused by them. But can it be said there is no evidence tending to prove the act of negligence referred to in this assignment? The very proposition asserted under it impliedly admits there is; but seeks to avoid it upon the' ground that the finding of the jury is against the preponderance of the evidence to an extent that shows manifest injustice has been done. It is the province of the jury to determine the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony. While this province may not be invaded by judges, the trial judge, who hears the testimony and observes the demeanor of the witnesses, the deportment of the jury during the trial and the attention given by its members to the testimony and argument of counsel, may determine whether the jury has gone beyond the bounds of its province to render a verdict against the preponderance of the evidence which manifests injustice; but, having determined this question on a motion for a new trial in favor- of the verdict, an Appellate Court will not, ordinarily, if the evidence were sufficient to carry the case to the jury upon an essential issue, disturb the verdict. Therefore, the question for us to determine under this assignment is, whether there was any evidence tending to sustain plaintiff’s allegation that defendant’s engineer was guilty of negligence in stopping the train from which the plaintiff fell ? The engineer, know *621 ing or charged with knowledge of the fact that the plaintiff in the discharge of the duties of his employment was on top of the cars composing the train, was charged with the duty of ordinary care for plaintiff’s safety, that is, such care as would have been exercised by a man of ordinary prudence under the same or similar circumstances. If, in his manner of stopping the train, he failed to discharge this duty to the plaintiff, he was guilty of an act of negligence imputable to the defendant. In determining whether an act is negligent, the relation of the party charged with the act to the one complaining of it; their duties growing out of such relation; their relative situation or position, at the time the act was done, and all the attending facts and circumstances tending to throw light upon or indicate its character, should be taken into consideration.

At the time the act in question was committed, one of defendant’s freight trains, of about 28 cars with a crew consisting of a conductor, engineer, and three brakemen (plaintiff being the rear brakeman) reached Mt. Pleasants and backed onto a storage track against a string of cars standing thereon, apparently coupled together, pushing them toward the opposite end of the siding. When the train took the siding, plaintiff in pursuance.of his duty, coupled the rear car of the train to the front car of the string, climbed on the standing cars and commenced to walk on top of them to the rear car, for the purpose of setting the brakes and signalling the engineer when they were pushed far enough. When he reached the open space between the third and second car from the end of the train farthest from the engine and was in the act of stepping from the end of one car to the other the engineer, without warning, when the train was running from four to six miles an hour, stopped the train which caused the second car from the rear, upon which plaintiff was about to step from the third, to separate from, the train and to roll, with the rear car attached thereto, a distance of 25 feet from where the car stopped from which it parted, thereby causing the plaintiff to lose his footing and fall from the end of the car between the rails of the railroad track, whereby he was seriously and permanently injured.

J. B. Taylor, one of the brakemen, who was on top of the train, about seven or eight cars from the engine, testified that at the time plaintiff was hurt the train stopped suddenly; that the engine and some of the cars in the train were equipped with air, the air working and that the engineer applied the air and the train stopped; that he knew the difference between a service application and an emergency application of air brakes, and that the train stopped like an emergency application of the brakes was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 S.W. 534, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 616, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-railway-co-v-pope-texapp-1906.