Texas Traction Co. v. Bogue

139 S.W. 1042, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 1042 (Texas Traction Co. v. Bogue) 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 Traction Co. v. Bogue, 139 S.W. 1042, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

RAINEY, C. J.

This is a suit by appellee to recover of the Texas Traction Company damages for personal injuries received by him by reason of the car operated by him on the Metropolitan Street Railway running into the rear end of a car ope'rated by the traction company on the said street railway track. Appellant pleaded the general issue, assumed risk, and contributory negligence. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee, and appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The first assignment of error complains of the court for refusing to submit to the jury a special instruction as follows: “You are instructed in this case to return a verdict for the Texas Traction Company.”

[1] The facts show that Bogue was an employs of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company in the city of Dallas, and at the time of the accident was operating one of its cars as motorman. The Texas Traction Company operated an interurban line from Dallas to Sherman, and in the city of Dallas its cars run over the track of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company. The street railway company has double tracks extending north and south (general direction) across East Dallas 'along Peak street, a distance of probably a mile or more. These tracks cross at right angles streets of the city, a distance from one another of 300 to 400 feet, at which crossings arc lights are swung by the city in the usual way. The city cars are called “North Belt cars,” and go the full length of Peak street, crossing Bryan. The interurban cars leaving the city pass out over Peak street to Bryan, then turn at right angles going into Bryan street and in a northeast direction out of the city; the incoming cars enter the city over the same line. The accident occurred at 11:45 o’clock at night. The incoming interurban car turned out of Bryan street into Peak street ahead of the city car. As the turn was made, the city car was some 400 or 500 feet north on Peak street. Bogue, the motorman, saw the interurban as it swung around the corner at Bryan and passed over the switch to the right-hand track, coming in. By that time Bogue had approached still nearer the car. He could see the interurban because its side was turned towards him and the inside was brilliantly lighted with electric lights. Bogue discovered at that time that there were no lights upon the rear end of the interurban ear. The collision occurred at Swiss avenue crossing, being the second crossing south of Bryan. The surface is level from Bryan to Swiss, rising just a little. The incoming interurban had stopped on the south side of Swiss avenue about the same time the outgoing interurban came up alongside of the incoming car and stopped, or almost stopped. At this time the city car approached Swiss avenue from the north.

Appellee testified:

“There were no red lights on the rear end of the incoming interurban car. I discovered that just after I hit it, and before he taken the crossover on Bryan street I did not see any red lights on the rear end of it. The first time I discovered there were no red lights on it was after it had turned into Peak street. After it passed I did not think very much about it. I knew it would pull right off and leave me like they always do. I did not think anything about running behind a car that had no red lights on it. I was not dreaming of any such thing as running behind that car; did not know anything about it; never had thought of it. I was not expecting to run into it. When I first saw it I never thought much about it, only I thought it did not have any markers on the back of the car. I have- seen them several times since. I don’t know that I ever noticed it before. I know that at that time they did not often carry them, but did not know it at that time. I also knew that a bright light *1043 was shining in my face. I think that if you were going south and following another car going south, and there is a ear on the other track going north, there would be a time when the car in front going south would prevent you from seeing the car going north on the other track. I was running something like six or seven miles an hour when I got to the north edge of Swiss avenue, and the south-bound interurban car something like six or seven feet, something like that, below Swiss avenue. The north-bound interurban ear was just sticking over a little bit into Swiss avenue, or about even with Swiss avenue, or something like that. When I came up to Swiss avenue and going into Swiss avenue, I think I was going about six or seven miles an hour. When I got to the south edge of Swiss avenue, I was making about three miles an hour; not over three miles an hour. I had to pass the headlight of the northbound Texas Traction Company car before I saw the south-bound Texas Traction Company car, which would put me around about the south side of Swiss avenue when I discovered the south-bpund Texas Traction Company car. The reason I did not see it sooner is because the headlight on the northbound traction company car was so bright it blinded me and I could not see it. The headlight of the north-bound Texas Traction Company car, which was on the opposite track from the track I was on, was so bright it blinded me. That headlight was very bright, in full blast. They usually use a screen of white cloth over the headlight to make it dim. They do that to screen the headlight so it would not burn so bright; it is to blind it. I have seen those screens of cloth used on this Ft. Worth interurban — the Northern Texas Traction Company — and then they have used that on these Sherman interurbans since. The Texas Traction Company have used them since I had the accident. They either used the screen, or when they come out Peak street here they cut their lights out very nearly. * * *
“There is a rule in the rule book of the Dallas Street Railway Company about the speed of cars passing cars that are standing still. * * * The rule is that when ODe car is standing still, and you are approaching with another car, the speed is three miles an hour, and over switches the same way. You are supposed to go over switches at three miles an hour when an inspector is around. I don’t know how fast a motorman ought to run; I did not know when I was in the service. All I cared was to make the schedule time that was given. I was due at the loop on Market street that night at 12 o’clock. I had only 15 minutes to run from Bryan street to town. I don’t know how far that is, but suppose it is over two miles. The rule in regard to spacing between cars while in motion is 300 feet, and at rest 25 feet. * * * When the interurban car turned oft of Bryan street into Peak street, I guess I was about three blocks north of it, something like that; I suppose it would be about 600 feet. That would throw the north side of the interurban car towards me as it took the crossing off of Bryan into Peak street. While operating a street car, the motorman is supposed to stand in the center of the car in the front end, in order to operate both his brake and controller. They are located right there; one on one side and the other on the other side. The rule respecting attention and observation in respect to the track in front is to look ahead of you continually while the car is in motion. I understood that at the time. I saw the interurban ear ahead turn in on Bryan and Peak street. * * * When 1 pulled out from Bryan street south, I don’t know how far ahead of me the interurban car was. * * * I knew about the time I got to Swiss avenue that the north-bound interurban ear was standing still.

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184 Ill. App. 208 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 1042, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-traction-co-v-bogue-texapp-1911.