St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Wilkes

159 S.W. 126, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1370
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 126 (St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Wilkes) 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 Ry. Co. v. Wilkes, 159 S.W. 126, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1370 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

8224 Writ of error granted by Supreme Court. The court charged the jury that: "The law provides that 75 per centum of the cars in trains, such as the one in question, shall be equipped with power or train brakes. Now if you shall find that 75 per centum of the cars in the train at the time of the injury, if any, to plaintiff were not equipped with power or train brakes, and if you find that such fact, if you find it to be a fact, directly and proximately caused or contributed to cause the caboose in which plaintiff was riding to run into the other portion of the train from which it had been separated," etc. It is the claim of appellant by the first assignment of error that the failure to have 75 per centum of the cars equipped with power or train brakes was not the direct and proximate cause of the collision, and that therefore it was error to submit the issue as to whether the cars were so equipped. It is the rule, supported by the weight of authority, that while one who violates a statute may be regarded as a wrongdoer, and the act regarded as negligence, still it may or may not be the proximate cause of the injury complained of, according to the facts of the particular case. Negligence cannot create a right of action unless it is the proximate cause of the injury complained of by the plaintiff.

However, as said in Ring v. City of Cohoes, 77 N.Y. 83, 33 Am.Rep. 574, upon a negligent happening, "where several proximate causes contribute to an accident, and each is an efficient cause, without the operation of which the accident would not have happened, it may be attributed to all or any of the causes; but it cannot be attributed to a cause unless without its operation the accident would not have happened." And such is the rule of the authorities.

In the present case it appears to be true that as the train was approaching the station of Murchison there occurred a violent jam, or impact, of the cars somewhere in the rear part of the train ahead of the caboose, throwing appellee out of his seat in the cupola of the caboose to the floor, and he was thereby injured. The crew, who testified as witnesses, all account for the cause of the impact as being a separation of the train in transit into two parts, by reason of the chain that held two cars together, in lieu of drawheads, becoming unhooked, or disarranged, and the separated rear end running into the head end as it slowed up for the station. And upon all the facts stated by the witnesses the jury would have been fully authorized to find a negligent arrangement *Page 128 of the chain by the wrecking crew, charged with the duty by appellant to securely arrange same. It further appeared from the evidence that the train consisted of 15 cars, including the tender of the engine; and, to meet the quantum of air brakes which must be carried in all trains of the kind here under the safety appliance act (Acts 31st Leg. c. 26) of this state, it was necessary that 12 of the cars be equipped with air brakes, assuming for the moment that the tender should be regarded as a car in such train line. There is sufficient evidence to show a failure to have as many as 12 of the 15 cars equipped with air brakes and connected up and working air in the train line ahead of the caboose. There is proof that if air brakes had been working on 12 cars next to the engine, and a separation of any of the 12 cars occurred, the breakaway in the train line would have caused the brakes on that portion to automatically set and stop the cars, and a serious collision would not have happened. Thus it would appear from the evidence that, although the separation of the train into two parts was by reason of the chain that held two cars together in the train becoming unhooked or disarranged, nevertheless the violent impact causing the injury would not have happened if the safety appliance act had been complied with. And it would not be in the province of the court to refuse to submit to the jury for them to determine whether the failure to equip 75 per centum of the cars with power or train brakes was an efficient cause of the injury, if the breakaway occurred between any of the 12 cars next to the engine in the train line. It can here be stated, in order that the contention be made clear, that the appellant insists that the evidence establishes that the breakaway occurred between the twelfth, and thirteenth cars, and that therefore the collision would have occurred even had the air on the 12 cars next the engine been connected up and working as required by law, and consequently the failure to comply with the terms of the law had nothing to do with the happening of the injury. The happening of the separation, or between what cars it occurred, was not seen or known of by the witnesses at the time or before the impact, and it rests in the opinion of the witnesses between what particular cars it first occurred, based on an examination of the cars and their condition and situation as it appeared after the collision. It was in the nighttime, and too dark to see a separation at the time, they say. Thus an explanation of the condition and situation of the cars, found immediately after the collision, together with the opinion of the witnesses in respect to the particular point of separation in the first instance, constitutes the evidence upon which it must be determined between which cars the separation occurred. The detailed description of the situation after the collision in some material respects makes it obscure and uncertain as to whether the separation first occurred between the twelfth and thirteenth cars, or between the coal hoist car and the car next to it, which was between the ninth and tenth cars. While the opinions of the witnesses, being expert in such matters, are entitled to weight, still such opinions are not conclusive, and must be considered along with all the facts detailed. And the opinion of the witness Woodall was conflicting with the opinion of the others.

It is not at all necessary to set out in detail all the evidence. We advert to the evidence of the foreman of the wrecking crew, who described the condition and situation found immediately after the collision, as being the more full and clear statement He says he found the train separated both at a point between the coal hoist car and the coal car next it, which would be between the ninth and tenth cars, and at a point between the two box cars ahead of the caboose, which would be between the twelfth and thirteenth cars. The train was connected up and unbroken, he further says, from the engine to include all six cars of the wrecking outfit. The coal hoist car, which was next in the train to the last car of the wrecking outfit, was, he says, chained up to the last car of the wrecking outfit, but between the coal hoist car and the coal car the trucks of the coal hoist had slid out from under the center pin, and the center plate had come off, and the chain that was wrapped around the center plate and used to transport the car had come out and was parted, though hooked together, which "made the cars about five or six feet apart." The car behind the caboose and the car immediately in front of the caboose were connected up, but unconnected with the other cars; the distance of separation is not undertaken to be given by this or any witness, only that the car ahead of the caboose was not connected up with the car ahead of it. On the car ahead of the caboose the chain used to pull the car was found, the foreman says, unhooked and down on the ground, and there were evidences on the ground of where it had dragged for a distance of two miles.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 126, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-southwestern-ry-co-v-wilkes-texapp-1913.