Western Co. of North America v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.

819 S.W.2d 952, 1991 WL 249726
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1992
Docket3-90-192-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 819 S.W.2d 952 (Western Co. of North America v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.) 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
Western Co. of North America v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co., 819 S.W.2d 952, 1991 WL 249726 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

Southern Pacific Transportation Company recovered judgment for $132,023.11, on the jury's verdict, in a negligence action against Western Company of North America arising out of a train-truck collision. Western Company appeals. We will reverse the judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.

THE CONTROVERSY

The driver of Western Company’s tractor-trailer rig stopped the rig at a stop sign on Fayette County Road 140 before entering State Highway 154. As shown in the diagram, the length of the rig left the trailer across the railroad track that ran parallel to State Highway 154. The tractor stalled. An oncoming Southern Pacific train struck the rig, causing extensive dam *953 age to the rig and to the train and other property owned by Southern Pacific. 1

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Southern Pacific sued Western Company alleging several grounds of negligence. Western Company answered by a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The plea of contributory negligence was quite general — that Southern Pacific’s loss was proximately caused by its own “failure to exercise ordinary care and such failure constitutes negligence of at least fifty-one (51%) percent,” barring any recovery against Western Company or diminishing any such recovery in proportion if Southern Pacific’s negligence was less than fifty-one percent. Southern Pacific did not challenge by special exception the generality of Western Company’s allegation of negligence.

In the course of trial, the court below ruled inadmissible certain documentary and testimonial evidence offered by Western Company. The excluded evidence tended to show that about four years before the collision Southern Pacific moved its track from a previous position to a position some twenty-six feet from State Highway 154, as indicated in the diagram. Other parts of the excluded evidence tended to show that the moving of the track was part of a more general re-design of the crossing area, undertaken to enable trains to increase their speed from twenty miles per hour to sixty miles per hour. Western Company wished to show by this evidence that locating the track so close to the intersecting highway amounted to a want of ordinary care and was a proximate cause of the collision.

Western Company contends on appeal that the trial-court’s exclusion of the evidence was reversible error. We agree.

DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

Southern Pacific contends on the following theory that the trial court properly excluded the evidence offered by Western Company: (1) the creation or maintenance of a crossing that is “extra-hazardous” is a ground of railroad culpability separate and distinct from the ground of “negligence”; (2) the substance of the excluded evidence was a showing that the crossing was “extra-hazardous”; (3) therefore, the trial court properly excluded the evidence because it did not come within Western Company’s pleading, which alleged only contributory negligence as a basis for avoiding or diminishing liability. Under this theory it was immaterial, of course, that Southern Pacific did not object by special exception to the generality of Western Company’s allegation of “negligence.”

The foregoing theory depends on the premise that liability resulting from an extra-hazardous crossing is not encompassed *954 within the ground of negligence. 2 We believe that premise is erroneous.

The allegation that a crossing is extra-hazatdous refers to one of two possible contentions relative to securing the safety of a railroad crossing by some traffic-control measure such as the presence of a flagman, mechanical warnings, gates, or wig-wag signals: (1) even though no statute required such a measure, the common-law standard of ordinary care required the measure in view of the severity of the hazard; or (2) a statute did require some such measure, and it was supplied, but in view of the severity of the hazard some additional measure, over and above the statutory measure, was required to satisfy the common-law standard of ordinary care. Charles L. Price, Extrahazardous Railroad Crossings, 7 Baylor L.Rev. 170, 170-72 (1955); 74 C.J.S. Railroads §§ 727, 728, at 1346-52 (1951); see e.g., Galveston H. & S.A. Ry. Co. v. Wells, 121 Tex. 310, 50 S.W.2d 247, 251 (1932) (“Evidence showing that special circumstances exist ... which make the crossing unusually hazardous is held sufficient to justify submission to a jury of the issue of the railroad’s negligence at the time of the accident.”); Southwest Stone Co. v. Symons, 237 S.W.2d 380, 386 (Tex.Civ.App.1951, writ dism’d) (“Defendant’s assignments that the pleadings ... did not raise the issue of negligence [is without merit where] Plaintiff’s petition ... specifically alleged that the crossing was especially dangerous as a nighttime crossing_”). It is obvious that these opinions, and many others like them, treat the question of an extra-hazardous crossing as one referring to the duty element of a cause of action for negligence, or a failure to observe ordinary care for the safety of others that proximately causes injury to another.

Nevertheless, Southern Pacific contends, these opinions do not mean what they say because the ground of liability based on an extra-hazardous crossing is not the same as negligence in view of the higher standard of care — an obligation to use “extra-ordinary care” — required in the case of an extra-hazardous crossing; and the appellate courts simply have not taken the trouble to assign to such ground a label equivalent to the “negligence” label which they use indiscriminately and erroneously. Southern Pacific offers no authority for this contention; it is evidently content to urge the contention a priori. We find no hint of authority for the contention. We find instead that the courts have uniformly and *955 consistently treated the issue as one of ordinary care — what measures would a reasonably prudent person have taken in view of the fact that the crossing was extra-hazardous — within the negligence doctrine.

The Western Company’s allegation of contributory negligence was general, not specific. When not excepted to, the plea of contributory negligence, in general terms, authorized Western Company to introduce evidence of any specific ground of negligence. Agnew v. Coleman County Elec. Coop., 153 Tex. 587, 272 S.W.2d 877, 879 (1954), overruled on other grounds, Burk Royalty Co. v. Walls, 616 S.W.2d 911, 925 (Tex.1981); see also Yeager Elec. & Plumb. v. Ingleside Cove L. & B., 526 S.W.2d 738

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819 S.W.2d 952, 1991 WL 249726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-co-of-north-america-v-southern-pacific-transportation-co-texapp-1992.