Texas Midland R. Co. v. Geron

162 S.W. 471, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 471 (Texas Midland R. Co. v. Geron) 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 Midland R. Co. v. Geron, 162 S.W. 471, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 162 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

LEVY, J.

(after stating the facts as above).

The first assignment predicates error upon the refusal of the court to give a requested peremptory charge to return a verdict for appellant. The insistence for error is that there is a failure of any evidence to show that appellee’s injuries arose from coming in contact with and stumbling over clinkers as alleged. At the very time of his injuries, according to the evidence, appellee was engaged in switching the stock car onto the passing track. The brakeman, Blevins, and the engineer, Boyles, besides appellee, were the only witnesses testifying in the case that were present at the occurrence. The appellee testified, as material to the point considered, that: “I made a reach for the stock car and caught the irons in this position [illustrating], and attempted to put my foot in the stirrup on the stock car in order to go up and set the brake, when my foot hit an obstruction, which threw me out of balance, and I fell against the stock car in this position, with my head here and my feet nearly north. I held-my feet up as well as I could, to keep from getting hurt; and the next thing I knew one of my feet hit the ground, and the next thing I knew they were picking me up. That is all I know. I had an idea at the time I had struck — when I hit the obstacle with my foot, just the minute I struck it — I had an idea what it was. I did not see the obstacle before I came in contact with it.

I was watching the movement of the stock car coming towards me. * * * Just as I made a grab for the iron I lifted up my left foot to grab the stirrup, and hit this obstacle, and the thought struck me that I had hit a clinker, and that caused me to lose my hold. I cannot say how far it was after I hit the obstacle until my strength gave out and my foot hit the ground. * * * It had rained a little shower that morning, and the grab irons were wet. The ground was not slick there that I could see. The ground was sandy, and sandy land does not get slick. I did not see whatever obstacle it was that struck my foot after I felt my foot strike against it. I judge I was standing a couple of feet from the side of the car when I caught the handholds. You cannot grab a car if you are too close to it I would judge that was about the distance that would give me plenty of room to catch the car and plenty of foot room. The end of the cross-ties extend further out than the rails, but hardly, I think, as much as 18 inches: I think it is about as much as a box car does. I had not seen these clinkers there before that. I have no recollection of .ever seeing them. I never saw them at the time of the accident, but I felt my foot strike something.” The engineer, Boyles, did not see appellee fall, but did see him immediately after he had fallen. He testifies: “I went up to Geron and asked him if he was hurt, and he said he was all broke up. I asked him how it happened, and he said he must have stepped on a clinker. I called to one of the brakemen to go get a doctor, and he said he had already sent for one. Then I stepped the distance between him and the clinkers. It was between 35 and 36 feet. I suppose there were some little clinkers, and there was one the size of my cap. I don’t suppose the clinkers were in a space over two feet, and in a kind of a circle. I made an examination between the space were these clinkers were, and where Geron was lying, to see if there were any footprints on the ground, and there was one impression there like as if a person had set his foot down pretty tolerably deep. It might have been an inch down, or two — say an inch in the ground. It didn’t show the print of the heel, the toe and the whole foot. It showed like it was shoved down. It didn’t show a track — a boot track — a foot track. I did not notice any track about the clinkers. That impression there in the ground was about 12 feet from where Frank Geron was lying.” The brakeman, Blevins, testified: “I saw Frank get off the flat ear, and it looked to me like he went to catch the stock car and kind of stumbled and went out of my sight for just a short while, and the car rolled up the track a way, and then I noticed Frank lying on his side, and I went up to where he was. From where I was at, the best I could tell, I saw him attempt to catch the car that had been kicked on the track, *473 and it looked like he stumbled, or something threw him off. When I got up to him I asked him what was the matter, and he kind of grunted, and said he stumbled over a cinder or clinker, or something of that effect. He appeared to be pretty badly hurt as far as I could tell. Before I left there I walked up the track a few feet and saw some clinkers where they had been cleaned up from the fire box. It looked like they had been thrown out, and extended over — small ones and large ones — -from near the track over to the passing track, probably four or five feet from where they shoveled them out. Some of them were small, some of them as large as my hat. All I could tell about these clinkers being disturbed was that I saw some green grass growing around them, and I saw some bright-looking grass. That is all I could tell about the clinkers being disturbed. And it looked like they had been knocked around, and showed some bright-looking grass. In my opinion, from the appearance of the ground and the grass, it looked like the clinkers had been recently disturbed. * * * I don’t think he moved square across from the main line towards the passing track. I believe he veered a little. He kind of jumped off the flat car, and I guess you call it veering a little towards south, as well as I remember. The next I saw of him he kind of stumbled, or missed holt or something. I believe I saw him make a grab towards the grabiron — some kind of a motion like he was going to get on. Then he went out of my sight like, and the next thing I saw was his hat go off his head. That was right after he made the grab for the car, and I kind of saw the bulk of his body in the air through the slats of the stock car. * * * It was immediately after we loaded Mr. Geron on the flat ear that I went and looked at the place where the clinkers were. I saw marks on the ground, footprints — dirt fresh torn up — north of where Mr. Geron was lying; to the best of my knowledge about 6 or 8 feet. I suppose 80 or 35 feet; it may have been not so far from where he was lying to the nearest clinkers north of him.”

There is no pretense in the record of there being any obstruction or substances, except the particular clinkers, in the space between the main track and the passing track. It is a necessary conclusion from the evidence above that there were several clinkers — about a dozen and a half — lying in the space outside the main track and nearer to the passing track. According to the engineer the clinkers were in a circle over a space of two feet, and according to the brakeman the clinkers were extended in a line of four or five feet, beginning at the passing track; and both agree that several of the clinkers were of the size of a man’s hat. And the testimony of the engineer, who stepped the distance at the time of the injury, was to the effect that the clinkers were located “between 35 and 36 feet” above the point where the body of appellee was lying on the ground after he fell from the car.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 471, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-midland-r-co-v-geron-texapp-1913.