Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Hope
This text of 149 S.W. 1077 (Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Hope) 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.
Opinion
Willie Hope, a minor, was in the employment of the defendant at Odessa. About 2 p. m. October 3, 1909, he had sealed the doors of the cars contained in a freight train standing on a side track north of and parallel to defendant’s main line. He began this work at the west end of the train, and going easterly. When he completed this task and reached the freight engine at the east end of the train, he turned back west, walking down the center of the main track, noting down in a book the numbers and initials of the cars in the freight train, which was standing on the side track. The defendant’s passenger train approached from the east, struck Willie Hope, and injured him. From the point involved it was about one mile along a straight, level track to the crest of the first hill east, and there was no curve or obstacle of any sort which could obstruct the view either of the train operatives or the person on the track. The case was submitted to the jury upon discovered peril, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff.
The engineer who was in charge of the train died before trial, but the fireman testified: “When I first saw him, he was near the east switch, at the stockyards, crossing to the south side, somewhere about the engine tank. He then walked down the main line, west, between the rails. The engineer blew the whistle and I rang the bell, commencing about 150 to 200 feet from him. The boy did not look back toward the engine until we were within 10 feet of him. He was looking toward the north side. He looked over toward a string of box cars while we were blowing the whistle. After the whistle was blown, the engineer applied the air. Pie did not apply the emergency at the start, just gave a service application, and before he struck the boy he put the air in the emergency. When I first saw him on the track, that was just as we came over the hill. It was from three-quarters to a mile to the hill in question.”
It follows, therefore, that the evidence in this ease is insufficient to show that the train operatives realized Willie Hope’s peril at such time as they could by the use of the means at hand have stopped the train. It may be that, under the evidence indicated in the record to the effect that the whistle was not blown or the bell not rung until the train was almost upon Hope, negligence on part of the operatives, in not sooner sounding the bell or blowing the whistle, might be predicated, but in the trial of this case no such issue was submitted to the jury; it having been submitted entirely upon discovered peril.
There being no sufficient evidence to support the issue of discovered peril, the case must be reversed, and it is so ordered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
149 S.W. 1077, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-p-ry-co-v-hope-texapp-1912.