Wininger v. Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Co.

143 S.W. 1150, 105 Tex. 56, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 116
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1912
DocketNo. 2375.
StatusPublished
Cited by146 cases

This text of 143 S.W. 1150 (Wininger v. Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Co.) 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
Wininger v. Ft. Worth & Denver City Railway Co., 143 S.W. 1150, 105 Tex. 56, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 116 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals of the Seventh District reversed the judgment of the' trial court, which was in favor of Halys Wininger, and rendered judgment for the railroad company, saying:

“We are of the opinion that the evidence, taken as a whole, fails to show such negligence as is alleged in the petition, on the part of appellant or its employees, proximately causing the injury complained of, and that therefore the requested charge should have been given and that for failure to give same this cause should be reversed; and as the case appears to have been fully developed on the trial below, judgment should here be rendered for appellant; and we think the facts hereinbefore found, together with the necessary deductions to be drawn therefrom, sustain said conclusion.”

The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals had authority to reverse the judgment of the trial court on the preponderance of the evidence, but it could not render the judgment, if, discarding all adverse evidence and giving credit to all evidence favorable to the plaintiff and indulging every legitimate conclusion favorable to the plaintiff which might have been drawn from the facts proved, a jury might have found in favor of the plaintiff.

The Honorable Chief Justice of the Court of Civil Appeals of the Seventh District made a very careful and elaborate statement of the evidence which will greatly aid this court in reaching a conclusion upon the issue before us.

Clarendon is the county seat of Donley County, and the road of the defendant company passes through the town, we will say from east to west, dividing the town so that hotels and some business houses and residences are north of the tracks, but the main business houses, churches and schoolhouses are on the south of the railroad track. The tracks of the railroad extended from east to west, as before stated, and the sidetracks and switches; in fact, the yards of the railroad were located on the north side of the track, embracing about 400 feet north and south and 3000 feet east and west. Three switch tracks were located on the north side of the main track, numbered one, two and three, and one switch track on the south. A ■water tank' and coal chute were located on the yards.

“The company’s said yards had been enclosed by a post and wire fence for many years, but the fence was not in good repair at the time of the injury and had not been for some time prior thereto, there being places where the wire was loose from the posts and in one or two places the top wires had been tied together so as to allow easy passage of pedestrians through the fence, -and those who had occasion so to do had been for many years going through and over said fence and across said yards and tracks to such an extent as to make reasonably well beaten paths along and across said yards, and which existed at the time of the occurrence; children living in the *59 same vicinity with appellee on the north side of the tracks, had been habitually going and coming across said yards in attending school on the south side thereof.”

‘1 Garnet Street is the first open street east of the yards connecting the north and south sides of the city, and it was generally used by persons in the northeast and southeast portions of the city in passing from north to south over the line of railroad.”

“Appellee resided with her father in the southeast corner of block No. 238, the east boundary line of which forms the west boundary of Garnet Street and it is the second block north from the company’s-yards, his residence being about five or six hundred feet a little west of north from where the company’s main line crosses Garnet Street; the church to which appellee and her father had started when she received her injuries was situated in the northeast corner of block No. 42, being the fourth block and about seven or eight hundred feet south of the company’s main line, and between Gorst and Kearney Streets; it is thus seen that appellee resided northeast of the company’s yards and the church to which she was going was southwest thereof. ’ ’

“On Sunday morning, about nine o’clock, about April 25, 1909, appellee, in company with her father, left their home to go to church, intending to cross the railroad on Garnet Street, but as they came out of their residence they saw that an engine and train attached headed east was standing across Garnet Street, so they took one of the trails or paths mentioned, leading in a southwest direction, and followed it until after they got into the company’s yards, passing on to the yards about one thousand feet east of the water tank, and reached switch track No. 3 at about nine hundred and fifty feet east of the water tank; but as there was a string of cars on track No. 3, they continued in a west course on the north side of the track until getting within about five or six hundred feet of the water tank. They came to the caboose, which had been cut loose from the train, and here they crossed track No. 3, east of the caboose, so as to be between it and, track No. 2, and continued their journey west; about the time they were passing the caboose they passed also the conductor, who was on the ground between tracks Nos. 2 and 3 and near the west end of the caboose, he seeing them and they him; there then being a string of cars on track No. 2, they continued their journey west between tracks 2 and 3 to a point slightly east of the water tank, when they tried to cross track No. 2, by going between cars and which were separated a space of six to eight feet on track No. 2, and in attempting to cross track No. 2 at this point appellee received her injury by a car which was moving west on track No. 2, the father at the time being from one to two steps ahead of her; at the time they passed the conductor and brakcman as hereinbefore mentioned, the father was slightly ahead of the child. While appellee and her father were going west between tracks 2 and 3, after they had passed the conductor, they saw the rear brakeman on top of the train then on track No. 2 and he saw them, and they passed on by.”

1 ‘ There was a long string of empty box cars standing on track No. 2, extending from about fifteen to twenty ears east of the water tank *60 to twenty or twenty-five ears west of it. This string of cars being uncoupled in two or three places, leaving a short space between where uncoupled.”

“As the crew were backing in on track No. 2 the second time to pick up the first division of their train left there, while moving from two to six miles per hour, they backed against it, causing it to move the string of cars west and on the same track, and appellee was injured about fifteen cars west of where the crippled car was, and by one of the cars which was on the track when the freight train pulled into the yards, and' one not belonging to the train, being handled by the crew.”

“At the time the injury was inflicted, the east end of the train was pointing south of east and the west end of it south of west, so as to place the most northerly portion of the train about the middle thereof and about opposite where the caboose stood, making a curve in the south side of the train.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 1150, 105 Tex. 56, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wininger-v-ft-worth-denver-city-railway-co-tex-1912.