Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Ray

287 S.W. 91, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1926
DocketNo. 9637.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 91 (Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Ray) 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 & P. Ry. Co. v. Ray, 287 S.W. 91, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

'LOONEY, J.

Appellees, the surviving children of W. M. Ray, deceased, filed this suit against appellant for damages on account of the death of their father, alleged to have been caused through the negligence of appellant in a collision between an automobile driven by J. H. Plangman, in which deceased was riding, and a passenger train of appellant, on October 12, 1923, at a public crossing known as Pratt’s Crossing in Kaufman county, Tex.

Appellees alleged negligence in (a) the failure of appellant’s operatives to blow the whistle, and ring the bell on the engine as required by the statute; (b) the failure of said operatives to keep a lookout for persons upon or going upon the crossing.

Appellant answered by general denial, and specially that Plangman and deceased were at the time engaged in a joint and common enterprise, and that they were each and both guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look and listen for the approach of a train or to exercise any care to discover the approach thereof.

The jury found in response to special issues that the operatives upon the engine on the occasion in question failed to blow the whistle at a distance of 80 rods from the crossing where the collision occurred, and failed to ring the bell on the engine at a distance of at least 80 rods from the crossing and to keep same ringing until the crossing was reached, and that such failure was the proximate cause of the collision; that said operatives failed to keep a lookout for persons upon or going upon the crossing such as a person in the exercise of ordinary care would have done; and that such failure was negligence and the proximate cause of the injury.

The evidence in our opinion warranted these findings, and, to that extent, are adopted as our conclusions; other conclusions will be stated in connection with the propositions to which they relate.

1. Appellant contends that both Plangman, the driver of the automobile, and the deceased were guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and that the trial court erred in refusing at its request a peremptory instruction for a verdict in its favor. The facts bearing on this issue are these:

Deceased and Mr. Plangman were traveling east on the public highway between Terrell and Wills Point, on the north side and parallel with the railway track, in an open prairie country with nothing to obstruct the view of either the travelers on the highway nor of the operatives on the engine. As to the precaution observed by Plangman and deceased to discover an approaching train, Plangman, the only witness on this point, testified as follows:

“As we approached this track crossing on the day of the collision Mr. Ray and I discussed the crossing. That was perhaps a half mile before we reached the crossing. Mr. Ray was on my right and I was at the steering wheel to the left. Mr. Ray was on the side next to • the railroad track. * * * we were riding in a one seated eoupé, a two-passenger ear. I could see in front of me as we approached the crossing. I could not see a train coming from the rear without turning around and looking back.' After we discussed the crossing in approaching it, Mr. Ray .looked back several times to my knowledge, and I looked back twice or three times myself. *92 There was one time I bent around Mr. Ray and the other time I looked through the rear glass, looking back. We were not expecting the Sunshine Special at that time, because I did not know when it would come. We were looking for any train, freight or passenger, or whatever it might be. I looked back twice. I could not say how many times Mr. Ray looked back; he may have looked back a half dozen times. I know he looked back two or three times when I observed him looking back. * * * I never drive fast and was not driving faster than 20' miles anywhere along there; when we got in 200 yards of the crossing I didn’t think I was driving over 12 or 15 miles an hour, and at the time we approached the railroad, possibly not over 10 or 12 miles an hour I would judge. * * * Prom the time about a half mile west of the crossing when Mr. Ray and I first discussed the crossing up to the time of the collision, if the train ever whistled I did not hear it; I certainly, was listening for the train. We were watching for the train, certainly trying to avoid the very thing that happened, naturally; that was absolutely the object we had in view in looking back. As far as I know the train never did whistle before the collision, and I do not know that it whistled then. I never heard the whistle at all. The train did not whistle from the time Mr. Ray and I first talked about it up to the time the train struck the car. If it did I did not hear it. I did not hear any whistle of any kind. There was no danger signals or anything like that. I first knew that a collision was imminent as I rounded the curve in this road approaching the track. * * * T would not think the pilot of the engine of the defendant was over 50 or 75 feet from me when I first saw it; it was right on us. I could not tell you how fast the train was running at the time. I heard the roar of the train and looked up and saw it coming. It was running pretty fast, but I do not know how fast and could not estimate it. It was running' like a train at full'speed, but I could not say how fast. There was no slack of the speed from the time I saw the train until it hit us that I could detect; it was just an instant from the time I saw the train until the crash. I had on the brake and had my hand on the reverse lever.”

On cross-examination he testified:

“About a half mile before we got to the crossing the fact that we were approaching this crossing was talked about between Mr. Ray and me, and, between the time we commenced talking about it and up to the time of the collision, I looked back twice, and I think Mr. Ray looked back three times, to see if a train was coming.
“Q. Now isn’t it a fact that the last time you looked back and the last time he looked back you were about 100 yards from the crossing? A. My best recollection is that we might have been a little less or a little more than 100 yards from the crossing.
“Q. The last time you looked and the last time you saw him look you were a little over 10O yards from the crossing? A. Yes sir, that is the best of my recollection.”

Redirect examination:

“I was listening and looking for a train. The first I knew of the coming of the train was hearing the rumble of the train, the roar and rush of the train would not make as much noise as a steam whistle; I could hear a steam whistle further than I could hear the rumble of the train, and I think I could hear the ringing of the bell further than I could hear the rumble of the train. Mr. Ray was looking out and listening for the train and discussing it. To my certain knowledge he was. I would think he was in position where he could have heard the whistle and the ringing of the bell if they had been sounded.”

Reeross-examination:

“When we were back there talking about that crossing I said to Mr. Ray, ‘You look to the west, and I will look to the east.’ Mr. Ray was on the south side, next to the track. I thought he was in better position to see a train coming from the west than I would be, and I asked him to look to the west, and he said he would, and I told him I would look to the east.”

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 91, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-p-ry-co-v-ray-texapp-1926.