Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Brown

181 S.W.2d 68, 142 Tex. 385, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 176
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1944
DocketNo. 8167.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 68 (Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Brown, 181 S.W.2d 68, 142 Tex. 385, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 176 (Tex. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Slatton,

of the Commission of Appeals delivered the opinion for the Court.

This is an action for damages brought by Mrs. Katheron Brown against the Texas & Pacific Railway Company as a result of a grade crossing accident. A jury trial resulted in a special issue verdict upon which the trial court rendered judgment in favor of Mrs. Brown for the sum of $15,445.00. The Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso affirmed the judgment on the findings of the jury, which submitted the theory of discovered peril. (Opinion not published). The railway company contends that the issue submitting the theory of discovered peril are not raised by the evidence.

The accident occurred at a crossing on Glenwood Drive within a mile and a half of the limits of the City of El Paso. The railway company has two tracks running east and west where Glenwood Drive crosses them running north and south. “Old County Road” runs south of and parallel with the tracks and intersects Glenwood Drive near the railroad crossing. The railroad tracks are slightly higher than the Old County Road and the approaches to the crossing flange out on both sides of Glenwood Drive. The crossing is in a residential district and there is considerable traffic over it. The usual stationary wooden *387 cross bars are used to warn the public of the crossing. The deceased was driving his car eastward on the Old County Road and at or near Glenwood Drive turned the car to his left and stopped the car at an angle on the west side of the Glenwood Drive about ten or fifteen feet from the south railroad track. The car was stopped at an angle heading northeasterly. At or about this time the passenger train was approaching on the north track from the east. At or about the same time another car on Glenwood Drive approached the crossing from the north, crossed the railroad tracks and passed the Brown car on the east side. After this car passed the Brown car going south, the Brown car started and moved to the east side of Glenwood Drive, continued on over the first railroad track and was struck by the engine of the passenger train going west as the Brown car was attempting to pass over the north track on the Glen-wood Drive crossing. The collision occurred on March 17, 1940, on a bright, sunshiny day at 4:15 P. M., Mountain time. Since we are called upon to test the sufficiency of the evidence in law to fix liability, it is necessary for us to quote copiously from the evidence.

The locomotive engineer testified by deposition, which was offered by Mrs. Brown as follows:

The accident happened on the crossing known as Glenwood Drive; that a person in an automobile going from the “Old County Road” would have to go upgrade considerably. The witness saw a car just before the accident approaching the crossing from the north on the engineer’s side of the road right after he had whistled for the crossing, the whistling post for the crossing being- about one-fourth of a mile east; that the whistle was blasted at the whistling post, two long, one short and a long; that the whistle was not sounded any more until the fireman asked him to sound it. The train was going about thirty miles per hour. The train was about two hundred feet from the crossing at the time the fireman requested him to blow the whistle; that he had not finished sounding the whistle when the fireman requested him to “big hole it.” At that time the train was about forty or fifty feet from the crossing, maybe not that far; that he “big holed it” right there (meaning an application of the emergency air brakes). The passenger train consisted of an engine and six coaches; that going to the speed of thirty miles per hour with the train on the occasion it would require about two car lengths or two car lengths and a half to stop the train after the emergency application of the air brakes takes effect. As to how long it required the engineer to blast the whistle after the fireman requested him to do so, the engineer *388 said “I would say one second.” When asked how much per second would a train slow down after the emergency was applied, the engineer testified he could not say, that it was a mathematical problem; that he did not see the Brown car until it was hit by the front of the engine. “After I saw the car roll, and nobody close to the track, I released my air and let the train roll off the crossing. I released the air when I saw the automobile fall in the clear on the north side of the track.”

Mrs. Brown offered in evidence the deposition of the fireman, who testified as follows:

At the time of the accident the train was going between twenty-five and thirty miles per hour; that the train consisted of six cars and an engine, equipped with air brakes in good condition. The fireman was familiar with the crossing on Glen-wood Drive; there is a whistling post east of-the crossing; that he saw a car coming from the north before the train reached the crossing, saw the Brown car before the accident, which was standing still when he first saw it. It was headed northeast at an angle of northeasterly. The Brown car appeared to be on the western side of the crossing. The automobile that came from the north before the accident passed between the Brown automobile and the train; the cars were seen to stop on the north and south sides of the tracks headed toward one another. Then the car from the north side passed on south on the east side of the Brown car. After the car from the north cleared the Brown car moved from that position. When the automobile going south passed around the Brown car, the engineer was requested to blow the whistle, at which time the engine was about two car lengths, and the engine from the crossing. The engineer then whistled. “The Brown car had not started up when I asked the engineer to blow the whistle.”

“Q. How far did you say the engine was from the track when the automobile started up. How far from the crossing? .
“A. Well, it was less than two cars and the engine.
“Q. Two cars, did you say?
“A. No, it wasn’t two car lengths; of course I didn’t pay much attention then until I was of the opinion he was going in front of us.
“Q. Then what did you do?
“A. I said ‘stop, you’re going to hit him,’ and gave him a sign.
“Q. How far was the engine from the crossing when you told him to kill it or big hole it?
“A. Forty feet.
*389 “Q. You told him to big hole it after you concluded he was going to cross ?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. How far was the train from the crossing when the Brown car started moving to ward, the track?
“A. Well, it was between the first time I told him to whistle, it was approximately two cars and the engine and at the time I told him then to stop, that would be hard for me to tell. I wasn’t paying much attention to distance. I was watching to determine in my own mind whether he was going over or not. As soon as I did, I said ‘stop.’
“Q. How long in seconds since he started moving before you came to that conclusion?

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 68, 142 Tex. 385, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-railway-co-v-brown-tex-1944.