Texas & N. O. R. v. Foster

266 S.W.2d 206
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 1954
Docket4870
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 266 S.W.2d 206 (Texas & N. O. R. v. Foster) 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 & N. O. R. v. Foster, 266 S.W.2d 206 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Justice.

This suit was brought by the appellee, H. R. Foster, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained, by him when, at 5 :37 p. m. on May 8, 1951, an automobile which he was driving in a westerly direction along Sixth Street in the town of Shepherd, Texas, was , struck by the steam locomotive of one of appellant’s regularly scheduled, south-bound passenger trains. Upon a jury’s verdict, judgment was rendered in favor of appellee for the sum of $30,000.

The jury, in response to special issues, found, in substance, that the operatives of appellant’s locomotive were guilty of negligence (1) in failing to keep a proper lookout, (2), in failing to ring the bell and to keep it ringing continuously while the locomotive was in motion for a distance of 80 rods from the crossing, (3) in failing to sound the locomotive’s whistle at a distance of 80 rods from the crossing, (4) in failing to sound the whistle or the bell immediately before the collision, (5) in failing properly to apply the brakes, and (6) in failing to have the locomotive under proper control as it approached the crossing. Each act of negligence so found was also found to have been a proximate cause of the collision. In addition, all issues submitted under the doctrine of discovered peril were answered favorably to the plaintiff. All issues submitting the defendant’s defensive theories were answered against the defendant, and the collision was found not to have been the result of an unavoidable accident.

The appellant predicates its appeal upon seven points of alleged error. The first three urge that the evidence showed, the appellee to have been guilty, as a matter of law, of contributory negligence which prox *209 imately caused his injuries. The fourth urges that there was no evidence to justify submission to the jury of issues under the doctrine of discovered peril. The fifth complains of the failure of the trial court to grant the defendant a new trial because of side-bar remarks made by counsel for the plaintiff during the progress of the trial. The sixth urges that the damages awarded the plaintiff are so grossly excessive as to indicate bias and prejudice on the part of the jury. And the seventh urges that the appellee failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence any negligence upon the part of appellant, and that therefore the trial court should have instructed a verdict in favor of appellant.

We have concluded, for reasons to be hereafter stated, that appellant’s fourth point is not well taken and that the evidence not only required submission of the issues under the doctrine of discovered peril but was sufficient to support the jury’s findings on those issues. Appellant’s fourth and seventh points are accordingly overruled. And since the foregoing conclusion renders it unnecessary that we pass upon appellant’s first three points, we forego doing so and pretermit any discussion, of them. Wilson v. Southern Traction Co., 111 Tex. 361, 234 S.W. 663; Texas & P. R. Co. v. Brown, 142 Tex. 385, 181 S.W.2d 68.

Sixth Street in Shepherd crosses appellant’s railroad at almost right angles. The general course of the railroad is north and south, while that of the street is east and west. The crossing is approximately 700 feet north of the railroad depot; and is approximately 1485 feet south of the south point of a curve in the railroad track. The crest of the bed of the railroad track is some four feet higher that the basic level of the street, and the incline in the street between the two levels is some forty feet in length on the east side of the track. On the date appellee was injured section houses, telegraph poles, some stacked fence posts, and a garden which was enclosed by a wire fence were situated within appellant’s right-of-way, north of Sixth Street and east of the railroad track. The section houses were in line and their fronts were 37½ feet from the trade. The most southerly of the houses was 212½ feet north of the street. The garden was between this most southerly of the houses and the street. The telegraph poles appear to have been a little further from the track than were the fronts of the houses, and the stacks of fence post, which were also south of the most southerly of the houses, do not appear to have been much higher than the porch floors of the houses. Trees stood north of the houses. The standard wooden railroad marker stood east of the track. There were no crossing lights, barriers or other similar devices at the crossing.

The appellee was thoroughly familiar with the crossing, and knew that a passenger train passed through Shepherd late each evening. He operated a garage that stood only 275 feet east of the railroad track, on the south side of Sixth Street. He had just left his garage and had proceeded only the short distance to the track when the collision occurred; He was accompanied by Troy Wiggins, who rode beside him. The car he was driving was owned by Wiggins. Appellee had installed a transmission in it earlier during the day, and he and Wiggins had started out to see if the transmission was working properly. It appears that Wiggins had his head beneath the dash of the car, apparently listening for any untoward sound in the transmission, as the car approached and went upon the railroad track. The automobile, judging from pictures of it that appear in the record, must have been fairly well centered on the track at the moment of impact. It became fastened on the front end of the locomotive and was carried, with appellee and Wiggins in it, a distance of 713 feet, the distance at which the locomotive was brought to a stop. The automobile was virtually demolished, Wiggins was killed, and appellee was injured.

The appellee testified that as he approached the track, and at a distance of approximately forty feet from it, he stopped the automobile and looked first to his left and then to his right for approaching trains. Having (according to his further testimony) *210 neither seen nor heard a train, in either direction, he then started the automobile forward in low gear and, without again looking in either direction for a train until virtually the moment of impact, gradually increased the automobile’s speed until he shifted into second gear just as he “hit the track.” He estimated that the automobile had attained a speed of between five and ten miles per hour, probably eight to ten, by the time it reached the track. He was of the, opinion that at any time before it reached the track he could have stopped it within six or eight feet, and said that if he had seen the train when he was twenty feet from the crossing, the collision would not have occurred. He offered no explanation for his failure to look again for an approaching train after (as he testified) he started his car from a standing position.

The appellee testified that from where (as he claimed) he stopped the automobile east of the railroad track he could see along the track toward the north for only a distance of approximately 300 feet, or about 100 feet beyond the nearest section house. The appellant, on the other hand, introduced testimony to show that when standing in the middle of Sixth Street, forty feet east of, the center-line of the railroad track, a person could see along the track toward the north a distance of 1485 feet, and that when standing within twenty feet of the center-line of the track such person could see along the track for a distance of a half mile.

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266 S.W.2d 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-n-o-r-v-foster-texapp-1954.