T. N. O. R. R. Co. v. Middleton

103 S.W. 203, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 497, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 103 S.W. 203 (T. N. O. R. R. Co. v. Middleton) 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
T. N. O. R. R. Co. v. Middleton, 103 S.W. 203, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 497, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 132 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Middleton was appellant's engineer on a passenger train running from Houston, Texas, to Lafayette, La., and the injury he alleged was at Beaumont. The negligence alleged as the cause of his injury was that defendant's employees who were engaged in operating another engine negligently caused and permitted the same unawares and without warning to collide with great and unnecessary violence against the train of cars and locomotive engine on which plaintiff was standing and to violently move and suddenly stop same, in the operation of which locomotive engine plaintiff was engaged as aforesaid. That in said collision and in the jerking of said engine and train and in the sudden moving and stopping of same and on account thereof, plaintiff was thrown with great force and violence against a certain hard substance to wit: "A sand box, and one or more of his ribs driven in and broken, and dislocated and detached from the breast-bone, and he was otherwise injured in and about his breast, back, heart and lungs, said injuries being of a serious and permanent character." There was a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $10,000. *Page 499

Besides general demurrer and denial, defendant pleaded that the coupling was done in the usual manner, that there was no sudden jar, movement or stop; that plaintiff's injuries, if any, were the result of a risk ordinarily incident to his employment, but if it was an extra hazard, it was open, apparent and known to plaintiff, and that he aggravated his injuries by running a train and engine the next day.

As there are assignments of error that question the verdict as against the evidence and also against the preponderance thereof, it becomes necessary to advert, to some extent, to the testimony. There was testimony of the following facts: That this train was going east and as it stopped at Beaumont its length made it obstruct two streets, in which case the practice was for switchmen to cut the train near the engine, and for a switch engine to couple on the rear end of the train and draw the rear portion of the train back a sufficient distance to clear the street. There was testimony by plaintiff and another engineer, both having had long experience, that such was the invariable practice and they had never known this to be attempted by the switch engine coupling onto the train engine. This is what was done on this occasion.

Plaintiff testified in substance that when the train stopped at the station he got down off his box and was engaged in getting his torch ready for the purpose of utilizing the time in examining his engine, when a switch engine with great force and violence struck his engine for the purpose of coupling with it automatically, pushing it and the train back about 30 or 35 feet, throwing him towards the boiler head and before he recovered his balance or about regained it, it suddenly and abruptly stopped and reversed, which threw him in the opposite direction against the sand box, the corner of which struck him in the region of the breast-bone and injured him. Plaintiff testified that there was no necessity or occasion for so violent a coupling and that it could have been made so as not to move the engine over two inches; that it was usual and understood that no man will couple to an engine without notifying the crew on the engine. That on this occasion he saw the switch engine ahead of him on the track, could see the headlight (it was night), but he didn't know it was a switch engine and supposed when it rang the bell that it was going to get out of the way. That he didn't expect such a thing as the coupling of a switch engine to his engine.

There were witnesses, viz.: the conductor of plaintiff's train, the engineer and fireman of the switch engine, the foreman and certain members of the switch crew, whose testimony in the aggregate went to show such facts as the following: That plaintiff was getting on his seat box when the coupling was made, that there was no sudden jar or jerk in starting the train backwards, that the coupling was not a hard one and was made in the usual and regular manner, that after the train had been pushed it remained standing for a time before the engine was started back; one said two or three minutes, one said not over a minute, and that "we shoved back, cut the crossing, and then pulled ahead." There was testimony that all the switchman had to do was to *Page 500 raise the lever and cut the cars. Also that it was not unusual to couple onto an engine, and that trains had been cut there several times by coupling onto engines.

The Conductor Moore testified also: "I remember nothing unusual except that the train was handled rather roughly there that night. The train commenced moving backwards before my passengers were all off and stopped suddenly. It started to back up and stopped suddenly, he supposed that the application of the air stopped it suddenly. That there were passengers on the train at the time, and it caused a lady to stagger around and he admitted that he exclaimed at the time, on account of the way the train was handled, 'Damn you, you will kill some one here yet!' That when the train commenced backing he pulled the signal cord for it to stop."

Plaintiff testified: "The engine was knocked about her length. When they pushed the cars over the crossing they stopped and started back at the same time. They stopped with a hard jerk. They either put on the air on the switch engine, or reversed it. They stopped it quick and started right back and threw me over. After the first jerk he did not regain his footing before he was hurt. They kept him going. He didn't have any chance at all to regain his footing or catch himself. His reverse lever was down in a corner and he didn't have anything to catch to. The sudden stop and start back is what threw me against the box. The way it was, when they threw me back against the boiler-head and he made this sudden stop and then I went forward and I was standing about four feet from the sand-box when I fell over against the corner. When I recovered from the other I must have gotten straight." Plaintiff testified that he was not injured by being thrown against the boiler-head, but his testimony shows that the coupling and the stop were done in a violent, unusual, unnecessary and unexpected manner, and in this his testimony is not without corroboration.

Appellant by the fifth assignment urged that the following ground for its motion for new trial should have been sustained: "Because the verdict of the jury is against and not supported by the evidence, in this: The plaintiff, in his testimony, claims that he was thrown back against the head of the boiler by the jar caused by the coupling of the switch engine to his engine, but he was not hurt or injured thereby, but that, being unable to regain his feet, owing to the rapidity of the movement, and by a very sudden and unusual stop in the movement, and instantaneous movement forward of the train, he was thrown against the sand-box and received the injuries sued for. He also testifies that the signals from his conductor to stop the train did come into his engine, but he had then already received the injuries, and was down on the deck of the engine, and could not respond to the same. And that the movement to the rear, stop, and sudden forward movement, all occurred within twenty seconds time, thus showing that plaintiff, if he had been thrown against the boiler-head, had sufficient time to regain his feet after the coupling, and before the sudden stop and instantaneous movement forward, and, further, it is shown by *Page 501 his witness, Moore, that there was no sudden jerking in the coupling and rear movement, and that the signals were given before the rear movement stopped.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.W. 203, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 497, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-n-o-r-r-co-v-middleton-texapp-1907.