Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Crawford

117 S.W. 217, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 196, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 173
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 217 (Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Crawford) 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 & Pacific Railway Co. v. Crawford, 117 S.W. 217, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 196, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 173 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

WILLSON, Chief Justice.

—This appeal is from a judgment for the sum of $950 recovered by appellee, the plaintiff in the court be-law, against appellant, in an action for damages for personal injuries appellee alleged he had suffered as a result of negligence on the part of appellant.

It appeared from the evidence that the accident occurred at Wood-lawn, a station on appellant’s line' of railroad. At that station it had two tracks, the main-line track and a sidetrack. The tracks were about eight feet apart and ran north and south and parallel with each other. The sidetrack was situated east of the main-line track, the depot just east of the sidetrack, and the postoffice a short distance east of the depot. The place provided by appellant for the purpose and used by persons entitled as passengers to be transported by its trains from which to get aboard the same was the space about eight feet wide between the main and the sidetracks. When a train was on the main track and another train was opposite if on the sidetrack, the *198 space between them was about four feet. Appellee reached Woodlawn about thirty minutes before the southbound passenger train was due. Seated on the steps of the postoffice about thirty yards from the main track, he was waiting for the coming of said southbound passenger train, on which as a passenger he intended to go to Marshall. While he was so waiting a freight train from the south, northbound, took the sidetrack, stopping something like twenty-five or thirty yards south of the depot. As the passenger train approached the station appellee walked from the postoffice to the depot and across the sidetrack, and then turned north, walking between the two tracks and toward the point where passengers usually boarded southbound passenger trains. The passenger train as it approached the station was moving rapidly, and as it was about to reach the point where he was walking appellee, still walking north, veered towards the east and was struck by the beam of the pilot on the freight train, which in the meantime, without his knowledge, had begun slowly to move north on the sidetrack. The verdict of the jury in appellee’s favor should be held to include a finding that appellant was guilty of negligence in so moving its train, and that appellee was not guilty of negligence which contributed to the injuries he suffered, or, if he was guilty of such negligence, that appellant’s employes in charge of its said freight train discovered him in the perilous position he occupied in time by means available to them to have averted the accident. The evidence, we conclude, was sufficient to support such findings by the jury. From the testimony of appellee it further appeared that at the time he was injured he was sixty years of age, was a millwright, saw-filer and machinist, and was earning $100 per month; that until a short time before the accident he had been earning $150 per month; that he had a lame ankle, but otherwise was “stout” and “all right;” that as a result of the injuries he received he suffered from his head, back, side, hip and shoulders, vomited up blood, and was confined to his bed about five weeks, had paid for medicines and services of physicians about $25, and at the time of the trial, about eighteen months after the accident, was barely able to be up and about.

After stating the case.—The court instructed the jury: “If you. find from the evidence that the defendant was negligent in propelling the engine against plaintiff as above set out, but you also find that plaintiff was negligent in going upon the ground at the point and putting himself in a position of peril in which he would likely suffer injury by the movement of the defendant’s train, then you will find for the defendant.” The instruction is assigned as error, on the ground that it required the jury, if they believed appellee was negligent in the particulars referred to, before finding for appellant to believe that it also was negligent, whereas if appellee was negligent the verdict should have been in its favor, whether it was negligent or not. The instruction, we think, is not justly subject to such criticism. The effect of the language used by the court was to tell the jury, if they believed appellee was guilty of negligence, to find for appellant, notwithstanding they might also believe that it was guilty of negligence.

.The court further instructed the jury: “If the jury shall find from *199 the evidence that defendant’s servants in charge and control of the operation of its engine did not actually know of the plaintiff’s peril, if any, or if they knew of it in time to have avoided striking him with said engine by use of all effective available means then at hand, consistent with the safety of the engine and its operation, then in either event you will find for defendant company.” The criticism made of the instruction is that it told the jury to find for defendant if they believed its employes in charge of the engine either knew or did- not know that appellee was in a position rendering it perilous to him for them to neglect to use the means at hand to prevent injury to him by the movement of the engine. It is apparent that the instruction— doubtless because of the failure of the court to use language he intended to use to express his meaning—was erroneous. But the error was favorable to appellant, and therefore it should not be heard to complain of it.

The instruction last quoted was followed by one in the court’s charge as follows: “On the other hand, if you find from the evidence that the plaintiff was not negligent in going to the place near the track where he was struck, and in the manner of his doing so, or if negligent, yet if you are satisfied that the plaintiff was discovered near the track by defendant’s servants in charge of the engine, and that said servants negligently failed to use ordinary care to stop or check the train and avoid striking the plaintiff after it became reasonably manifest to them that the plaintiff would not move far enough away from the track to keep from being struck, and if the plaintiff received his injuries through the negligence of such servants as above defined, then find for the plaintiff.” The specific objection urged to this" instruction is that neither the pleadings nor the evidence made an issue as to discovered peril. The allegation in the petition was a general one that appellant carelessly and negligently “moved and. ran one of its engines against plaintiff, thereby knocking him down and thereby greatly and seriously and permanently hurting and injuring him,” etc. We think the allegation was sufficient to support the charge. Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Dyer, 38 S. W., 218; Texas & Pac. Ry. Co. v. Meeks, 74 S. W., 329; 2 Abbott’s Brief on Pleadings, 1500. The engineer operating the locomotive drawing the freight train testified that he did not see appellee at all before the pilot beam struck him. He further testified that at the time the engine was moving about as slow as it could be operated and move the train—“about as slow,” he added, “as an ordinary man would walk.” Appellee testified he was walking towards the north, the direction in which the freight train was moving, at the time the pilot beam struck him.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 217, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 196, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-railway-co-v-crawford-texapp-1909.