Texas Electric Ry. v. Couts

250 S.W. 266
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1923
DocketNo. 6504.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 266 (Texas Electric Ry. v. Couts) 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
Texas Electric Ry. v. Couts, 250 S.W. 266 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

This suit was institúted by C. E. Couts against the Texas Electric Railway, for damages which he alleges to have sustained by reason of being struck by the overhang of appellant’s street car as it rounded a corner on Fifth street into Austin street, at Waco, Tex., and by being thrown but appellant’s street ear against an automobile then being driven on said Fifth street, in an opposite direction from that which the street car was going, thereby rolling and crushing him between the street car and the automobile, and throwing him against the automobile, causing serious and permanent injury to his leg. Plaintiff further alleging that the streets, at the time of the accident, were crowded by pedestrians, automobiles, and street cars; that he was a stranger at the time; was not acquainted with the mechanism of street ears as to their overhang ; nor was he acquainted with the direction in which the tracks of appellant were laid out at the point in question, but believed the same-to go straight across Fifth street; instead of turning up Austin street at the place of the accident; and further that he had stepped off of the property line, and had proceeded a short distance into the street, preparatory to crossing to the opposite corner, in the walk usually traveled by pedestrians, when an automobile suddenly swerved into said Fifth street, and that he went forward toward the front end of the street car, intending^ to cross in front of the same, but that the operatives of said car immediately put same into operation, and that he was afraid to go in front of the same because of the fear of being struck by an automobile; that he approached the street Car near the front, and that the motorman saw him standing near by the car, and saw the automobile, suddenly turn into Fifth street, and knowing the crowded condition of the streets at the time carelessly and negligently put into operation his car, or, if he had started same, carelessly and negligently failed to stop or lessen the speed of the car, and by reason thereof appellee was struck by the overhang, and the injuries complained of resulted as a proximate cause of the carelessness and negligence of the operatives of said car; and that they could have, by the exercise of ordinary cafe, avoided same, and were negligent in failing to exercise ordinary care, seeing the automobile turn into the street, and seeing appellant standing near their car, in starting it at a high and dangerous rate of speed at the time. Appellee further alleged that the operatives of appellant’s street car on said occasion did see him standing in this perilous position, and did see the automobile, driven by a lady, turn suddenly into the street, and did know the crowded conditions of the streets at the time, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have known their condition, and that after discovering said peril they were negligent in failing to exercise ordinary care, by the use of the means at hand, to stop said car, in order that appellee might extricate himself from his perilous position, but that they carelessly and-negligently started said car at a high and dangerous rate of speed; of, if said car was in operation, failed to exercise ordinary care, by the means at hand, to stop the same and avoid the injury to appellee by reason of being caught between the street car and. the automobile. All of which injuries he alleges to have sustained by reason of the negligence above, which her alleges to be the proximate cause; and further alleges that he has been damaged in the sum of $50,000.

Appellant answered by general demurrer .and special exceptions and general denial; and further, for special answer, appellant alleged that the injuries to appellee were the direct and proximate result of appellee’s own negligence, in that he, knowing the location of the street car track, and that street cars passed over the same at regular intervals, without exercising any care for his own safety, went upon and near the track in such close proximity thereto as that, in the ordinary operation of said car at that point, the overhang of the car would necessarily strike him; and knew the street car, in rounding said corner, in its ordinary operation, would overhang from four to six feet, but notwithstanding this knowledge, appellee carelessly, *268 negligently, and recklessly placed himself in such a position that in the ordinary operation of the car under such circumstances it would necessarily strike him.

The cause was submitted to a jury under a general charge. The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee, in the sum of $20,000. Appellant filed its amended motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the court, an exception was taken thereto, and notice of appeal given; and appellant here now presents its case for our determination upon the record.

We find that on or about the 23d day of May, 1917, appellee, C. F. Couts, was in the act of crossing the street, in a westerly direction, at the corner of Fifth and Austin streets, in Waco, Tex., on the walk usually used by pedestrians crossing said street, and at a place where one of appellant’s interurban street cars was stopped taking on passengers; that immediately after appellee stepped off the curb at the property line, and had proceeded a short distance in the street toward the front end of appellant’s said street car, an automobile, driven by a lady, suddenly turned .into said Fifth street, on the same side of the car on which appellant was standing, and going in an opposite direction thereto; that appellee stepped forward toward the street car, at which time the motorman saw both appellee and the automobile which had turned into said Fifth street. Notwithstanding the fact that there was not much space between the car and the sidewalk, and notwithstanding the crowded condition of the street at that time, appellant’s operatives of said street car immediately started said car, by what some of the witnesses termed “kinder fast,” and by so doing said motorman did not exercise that degree of care required of him in regard to the safety of persons near the track on which he was operating the car, in that he started the same so fast that appellee could not avoid the injury, or in failing to stop the same or lessen the speed after seeing both appellee and the automobile in such close proximity to the car as injury was likely to happen; and that he did not exercise that degree of care that an ordinarily prudent person engaged in a like or similar occupation would have exercised under all of the circumstances of this case, which said motorman was acquainted with, or should have been acquainted 'with by the exercise of ordinary care, in that the record shows that he had operated the car for more than a year every day along this same street, which was narrow at this point, and was always crowded at about 6 o’clock p. m., the time at which this accident occurred. And we further find that the operatives of said street car, having seen appellee standing near the track on which the car was being operated, and having seen the automobile suddenly turn into said Fifth street, going in an opposite direction from the street car, knowing the position in which appellee was standing, and that the street was narrow at that point, failed to exercise that degree of care which an ordinarily prudent person would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances, and stop said street car or lessen the speed thereof in time for appellee to have extricated himself from his perilous position; and that they failed, by the use of means at hand, to exercise that degree of care required of them and stop said street car or lessen its speed, in order to avoid an injury to appellee at this time.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-electric-ry-v-couts-texapp-1923.