50 S.W. 333 | Tex. | 1899

Stewart sued the railroad company in the District Court of Harris County to recover damages for injuries received by him while in its employ and through its negligence. The railroad company pleaded a general denial, that the plaintiff was injured through its own negligence, and that the injuries received by plaintiff were caused by the negligence of his fellow servant. The trial was had before a jury, and verdict and judgment rendered in favor of Stewart against the railroad company, which was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

The facts necessary to an understanding of the questions presented by this writ of error are in substance that on January 22, 1897, regular freight train No. 7 on the road of the plaintiff in error was on its regular run from Houston to Hearne. Its regular time was shown on the schedule or time card, and its speed was limited from twelve to sixteen miles per hour, which was known to the engineer on train No. 103.

After regular train No. 7 had departed from Houston, extra freight train No. 103 left the city of Houston at 5:20 a. m. of the same day for Hearne, running under the following orders, which were delivered to the engineer and conductor: "(1). No. 4, engine 141, will wait at *543 Thompson until 6:05 a. m. for extra 103, north." (Signed) "J. M. L." Below it were written the words, "Make twenty-five miles per hour." "(2). No. 6, January 22, 1897, engine 103, will run extra from Houston to Hearne and has right of track against No. 8, engine 127, and No. 12, engine 129, Houston to Hempstead." (Signed) "J. M. L." The initials were those of the superintendent of the railroad company, but the orders were delivered from the train dispatcher. The witnesses differed as to the meaning of the words, "Make twenty-five miles per hour." The train dispatcher testified that it applied as far as Thompson only, while the engineer and conductor on 103 understood it to apply to the whole way to Hearne and acted upon that interpretation, and the Court of Civil Appeals concluded it was a reasonable construction of the language.

Henry A. Stewart was fireman on 103 and Higgins was engineer in charge of that engine. There is a conflict in the evidence as to what control or supervision the engineer had over the fireman, but the evidence is sufficient to justify the conclusion of the Court of Civil Appeals that it was of such a character as to make him a vice-principal of the company as to Stewart and not a fellow servant.

On the trip from Houston, extra No. 103, under telegraphic orders sent from the office of the train dispatcher, met and passed a number of trains going in the opposite direction, viz., from Hearne to Houston.

Regular train No. 7 was about three hours behind its regular time, of which fact neither the conductor nor the engineer on 103 were notified by the train dispatcher nor by any station agent. If No. 7 had been on time it would have reached Hearne before the arrival of 103. The evidence was sharply conflicting as to whether it was the duty of the train dispatcher to furnish notice to the conductor and engineer of 103 of the whereabouts of No. 7, or that the engineer on 103 should inform himself of such fact by inquiry at the different stations. Two train dispatchers testified that, concerning trains going in the opposite direction, it was the duty of the train dispatcher to give orders and directions to 103 as to the whereabouts and the place of meeting of such opposing trains, but that it was the duty of the engineer upon the extra train to inquire at the different stations if he needed information of the whereabouts of regular train No. 7, running in the same direction. Stewart and the engineer on the train, Higgins, both testified that it was the duty of the train dispatcher to furnish information with regard to No. 7 and that the extra train would only stop at a station if a red board or light, which is a signal for orders, was put up, and would indicate that the station agent had orders for that train.

When 103 reached a station known as Benchley, it was running at a speed of twenty-five or thirty miles per hour. It was foggy and very difficult to see an object at a considerable distance ahead. There was no signal out for orders at Bencliley and the engineer did not bring his train to a halt at that station, but passed by, and just as he was going out of the switches at the north end, he discovered the rear of train No. 7 but a short distance ahead of him. The engineer at once put on the *544 air to its fullest capacity to stop the train, and he and the fireman leaped from the cab of the engine. The collision occurred and the fireman received serious injuries.

The judge of the trial court gave to the jury the following charge: "The train dispatcher, of a, railroad company owes to those operating its trains the duty to use ordinary care to give to the employes operating its trains such information as is necessary to the operation of its trains in a reasonably safe manner." "If you believe from the evidence that the train collided with by the engine on which the plaintiff was fireman was two hours or so behind time, as alleged in plaintiff's petition, and that those operating the train on which plaintiff was fireman had not been notified thereof and if you find such failure, if any, to give such notice caused injury to the plaintiff, and if you further find that, such failure, if any, to give such notice was, tinder all the circumstances, a failure on the part of the railway company to use ordinary care to give the employes operating the train on which the plaintiff was fireman such information as was necessary to the operation of said train in a reasonably safe manner, then, if you so find, you will find for the plaintiff, and against the defendant, such an amount as from the evidence you believe will compensate the plaintiff in money for his diminished ability, if any, to labor and earn a living; for his lost time, if any; for his medical expenses, if any; and for his physical and mental pain and suffering, if any, caused by such accident (if you find any such were so caused), unless, under the charges hereafter given, you should find the plaintiff is chargeable with contributory negligence debarring recovery, in which event, if you so find, you will find for the defendant."

In support of the charge, the learned judge who wrote the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals said: "The contention is that the charge imposes a duty not imposed by law, and invades the province of the jury by assuming as a fact that about which there was a conflict of evidence. If the duty expressed by the charge is one which the law imposes, the opinions of witnesses that it did not exist can not affect it; and, on the other hand, if the law does not impose the duty as it is defined, the charge is necessarily erroneous. * * * The court can not ordinarily instruct that a particular act done or omitted constitutes negligence unless the act done had been prohibited or that omitted has been enjoined by statute. But where the law, whether written or unwritten, has imposed a duty, the court may define such duty and instruct that a failure to perform it is negligence."

The fault of the charge under review is not in the fact that it defines what is the duty of the railroad company towards its employes under circumstances such as, are shown by the evidence in this case, because we believe that there can be little controversy over the proposition of the Court of Civil Appeals that a court may and should instruct the jury as to what is the duty of the master to the servant under such conditions, defining that duty and informing the jury that a failure to perform it constitutes negligence; however, in this case the court did not *545 inform the jury of the duty of the master, but stated that the duty which by law rested upon the master was an obligation to be performed by a particular employe, the train dispatcher, when there is no law, either statutory or otherwise, which requires that a train dispatcher be intrusted by every railroad company with the performance of that particular duty. The rule announced would take from the railroad company the power to provide other methods by which to give notice to its employes under like circumstances and the right to commit the performance of such duties to such of its employes or officers as it may see fit. The charge was wholly unwarranted by the law, and had the effect, considering the state of the evidence, to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff unless they should find, that he was debarred of recovery by contributory negligence. The evidence was undisputed that the train dispatcher did not, directly or indirectly, impart to the engineer or conductor on extra train 103 any information of the whereabouts of regular train No. 7. Consequently, as we said before, the effect of the charge was to direct a verdict in the case, and we doubt not that the jury must have stopped at this point in their inquiry when they decided that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence.

It is the duty by law of a railroad company to adopt such measures as are reasonably safe to inform its employes of the whereabouts of trains upon the track on which they are operating another train so as to enable them to guard against collisions and to protect themselves from injury. Railway v. Smith, 76 Tex. 611. But the law has not undertaken to designate the particular means by which this duty shall be discharged, nor to indicate any particular officer or employe upon whom it shall be devolved. The evidence in the case would have justified a finding that, under the rules of the company, it was the duty of the engineer upon extra 103 to take notice of whereabouts of regular train No. 7, which was going in the same direction, and for the purposes of self-protection, to inquire at the different stations along the road concerning train No. 7. This does not seem to be palpably unreasonable or unsafe. If, for instance, the train dispatcher bad directed the station agent at Bryan to inform the engineer of 103 that No. 7 had just passed Bryan, it would have been a direction to the agent at that place to give to those in control of 103 information which the train dispatcher must have received from the station agent himself before he could have given the instruction and if when 103 stopped at Bryan, Higgins, the engineer, or the conductor had inquired of the agent at that place for regular train No. 7, he or they would have received the same information as if it had been retransmitted to the agent by the train dispatcher himself, and would have been just as effective in giving protection to those operating the following train. Likewise, if the engineer bad halted his train A Benchley and bad inquired for No. 7, he would have received the same information as if the station agent at Benchley had put up the signboard calling for him to stop for orders and had then delivered to him directions *546 from the train dispatcher on the subject. It might have caused some delay in the movements of 103, but that was a matter to be considered by the master and did not concern the servant. It would not have been less secure to the crew of the following train. A court can not say as a matter of law that a railroad company must perform its duty to its employes and give to them information in a given manner or through a certain person, nor in such way as would be most convenient to the employes, nor even in such manner as to be most secure, but the company must employ means reasonably safe to its employes engaged in the business.

It is not necessary for this court to add to the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals upon the validity of article 2293a, Revised Statutes, except to say that the contention of plaintiff in error that the Constitution of the United States secures to carporations, all rights conferred upon citizens as between themselves, although the same right is not given to the citizen against the corporation, is not sound. The railroad company does not seek equality before the law, but an advantage of the adversary party. The law is valid.

For error in the charge of the court before indicated, the judgments of the District Court and Court of Civil Appeals are reversed and the cause is remanded. It is ordered that the appellee pay all costs of this court and the Court of Civil Appeals.

Reversed and remanded.

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