Boxie Ethel Littleton, as ad-ministratrix and personal representative of the estate of J. B. Littleton, deceased, sued the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Bailway Company for damages on account of the death of her husband, J. B. Littleton, while repairing a car in appellant’s switchyard at Kenedy, Tex. The petition also alleges that she is the surviving wife of deceased, and that Stanley B. Littleton, age 11, Mae Ella Littleton, age 7, and Theresa Littleton, age 3, are the only children of the said J. B. Littleton, deceased, and that his father and mother both died before the said J. B. Lit-tleton was killed, and she sues for herself and for the use and benefit of the children; that appellant maintained at Kenedy repair shops, roundhouse, shopyards, and tracks where “bad order” cars were repaired; that among other tracks there maintained are what are known as “rip tracks,” which were regularly used in the" repair of “bad order” cars, and where thе railway’s employés were placed to work in such repairing. At Kene-dy the railway branches, one line going to Corpus Christi and the other going east to Houston and other points. Between the Corpus Christi and Houston lines is a connecting switch which goes from the Corpus Christi prong of the Y to the Houston branch, and this is south of where the two lines branch and south of the depot, roundhouse, and repair tracks. The “rip tracks” and roundhouse tracks are connected with this line which cоnnects the two branches by switches, and the track upon which deceased was working is equipped with a derailing device. The car upon which he was working, however, was outside or south of the derail at the time of the injury.
A switch engine used in the yards had gone out onto the Corpus Christi main line and gotten a string of empty cars. The engine was south of the cars, and the purpose was to “kick” these cars, or give them such a start that when released from the engine they would run ovеr the connecting switch onto the Houston main line. The switch where the engine had gone out was either left open or was opened by some one, so that when these cars were “kicked” they ran into the “rip track,” where deceased had jacked up a- car and was inserting or fixing a bolt, and propelled that car over him, and he was killed. It is alleged that no warning was given him and that the cars were “kicked” at a high and unnecessary rate of speed and force; that before he began work on the car deceased placed a blue flag on display near the south end of the car that stood on the “rip track,” between where he was working and the switch, which was a signal or notice to those operating the engine that he was working under or about the car or cars on that track.
Negligence is charged by reason of the “kicking” of said cars at a high and unnecessary rate of speed, in failing to ascertain if the switch was open or in leaving same open, and in failing to provide and keep locked a derailing device for the protection of employés working on that track; and that the derail north of this ear was no protection to deceased, because the car upon which he was working was between it and the switch where the empty cars came in. Further, that the switch which controlled the repair track was defective and insufficient, in thаt it was not provided with a private lock, and that fact, together with a failure to inspect the switch at the time to ascertain if it was closed or open, is charged as negligence. It is also charged that defendant violated its. own rules by disregarding the blue flag which was up on said “rip track” as a warning that employés were at work on said track; and that the company failed to provide deceased with a safe place to work; and all such alleged acts of negligence are charged to have been the direct and proximate cause of the injury.
Defendant denied all the material allegations, pleaded that the track where the injury occurred was equipped with a derailing device as required by law; that Little- *1196 ton knew said track was so equipped, but voluntarily engaged in work on a car outside of tbe derail and thereby assumed the risk incident to working outside of same; that prior thereto defendant had promulgated a rule for the government of its employes in repairing cars, as follows:
“That no employs shall perform work or engage in labor on any car standing on the repair track outside of and unprotected by derailing devices.”
Further, that deceased directed the placing of the car where it was and voluntarily and against instructions engaged in work on the same by reason of which he assumed the risk.
It may be said that defendant filed a special plea in the form of various exceptions to the plaintiff’s right to sue in a representative capacity, and did not show by the petition that the car upon which he was working was being used in interstate commerce, and that the suit was brought under the Act of April 22, 1908, § 9, as amended April 5, 1910, of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (chapter 143, 36 Stat. 291, § 2); but in the order overruling such exceptions the court says that plaintiff stated that the suit was brought under the state statute, and that no recovery or liability was claimed under the federal Liability Act.
The verdict and Judgment were for $8,-000 for Mrs. Littleton and $4,000 each for tlie three children.
There is no pleading that the car upon which Littleton was working was being used in interstate commei’ce, nor is there any plea that deceased was guilty of contributory negligence. The exceptions to the petition are, largely, because it does not.show that claim is made under the federal act, and because plaintiff cannot suе in a representative capacity under state statute.
It must be kept in mind that paragraph 3 of the amended petition, upon which the case was tried, is:
“Plaintiff files this suit for the use and benefit of herself and for the use and benefit of the children above named and mentioned.”.
“Unless plaintiff’s petition makes him prima facie guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, or unless the undisputed evidence shows contributory negligence as a matter of law, the defendant, to make out that defense, must allege and prove the act or acts relied on as constituting such negligence.” S. A. & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Belt (Civ. App.)
Contributory negligence was not shown a3 a matter of law, and it therefore was necessary for same to be alleged and proved in order for it to be available as a defense. The appellant not having pleaded this defense, the court was not required to give any charge at all on that matter, and appellant could not have been injured by the giving of the general charge on that subject. The assignment is overruled. Railway Co. v. Harris,
The second аssignment deals with substantially the same matter as the first, and is overruled.
“These charges ignored entirely the issue, made by the evidence, of the combined negligence of appellant in having the track in the condition it was in and that of the engineer in running the train at too high rate of speed, and also the essential element, to bar appellee’s right to recover on the ground that he assumed the risk, that he knew the danger incident to the manner in which, and the rate of speed at which, the train was being run over such a track, or that such danger was apparent to him. Railway Company v. Lempe,59 Tex. 19 . * * * Said charges were also misleading, constructed as they were, and calculated to cause the jury to believe that appellee assumed the risk of any injury resulting to him from the condition of the track, even though there were unusual and extraordinary sags or defects in it which were not apparent and of which appellee had no knowledge.”
A recent learned discussion of assumed risk and contributory negligejnce will (be found in G., H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Hodnett,
What were the risks ordinarily incident to Littleton working outside the derail? It may be that of cars backed in there for repairs, etc., but we do not see how it could be successfully maintained that he assumed the risks of the switch being left open and a string of ears to be hurled in there, when they were not even intended for that track, by the engineer and those handling the switch engine. If assumed risk be based upon the idea of knowledge of the danger assumed, then deceased did not assume the risk from which his death resulted. The assignment is overruled.
“Listen! You have heard the charge of the court, and you have heard all the evidence in the сase, and you know this good woman and innocent children (counsel here turning for a moment to face plaintiff and her children) have been wronged by the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Company. Yes, sir; wronged, and she has to do washing for a living. The proof in this case shows that she has no estate; that her children have no estate, but, on the contrary, her husband did not leave her anything, and that they were dependent upon his earnings, and that means — what does that mean? — that she must rustle for herself and children”
—for the reason that all said language and argument, and particularly that portion thereof stating that “she has to do washing for a living,” was prejudicial, etc. The court explains this bill by saying:
“Mr. J. L. Brown, in his opening argument for the defendant, said in substance, if the railroad should kill my wife, my personal feeling would be that it has not money enough now, nor could not in the next five years make enough, to pay me what I would feel to be my loss; but this is not the question. Mr. Littleton was 37 years old аt the time of his death, and the pleading and proof is that he had acquired no estate and for the. year preceding his death had earned an average of a little more than $54 per month. I do not refer to this in any spirit of criticism of him, but only to show that in passing upon the question of amount of damages, if you should find any, that the pecuniary loss is to be considered in determining the amount of your verdict.”
In Railway Co. v. Jones,
“It is not every case in which this court will reverse for the use of impropеr language by counsel for the successful party in his argument to the jury. But the evidence will be looked to, and if the verdict be against the apparent weight of the testimony, or the damages seem excessive, it will be presumed the words have had the effect the counsel intended, and the verdict will not be permitted to stand” — citing Willis & Bros. v. McNeill,57 Tex. 465 ; Railway v. Jarrell,60 Tex. 268 .
In that case the self-interest of the jurors was appealed to, in that persons would be made paupers and they would, in common with others, hаve to support them.
In Moss v. Singer Bros.,
In this case it cannot be said that the preponderance of the evidence was apparently in favor of the appellant. Judge Stayton said, in I. & G. N. Ry. Co. v. Irvine,
“The use of improper language оr course of argument by adverse counsel, within itself, fur- *1198 nislies no sufficient reason for reversing a judgment; and it is only in cases in which a preponderance of the evidence seems to be against the verdict, or in cases in which the verdict seems excessive and there is reason to believe that the verdict may have been affected by such course of conduct, that it becomes a ground for reversal.”
We are unable to say, from an examination of this case, that the verdict is excessive, or that it is against the preponderance of the testimony to such an extent that it could only be accounted for on the theory that the minds of the jurors were inflamed by the statement made that Mrs. Littleton had been wronged and would have to do washing. The jury awarded her $8,000 for the loss of her husband, and to each of the three small children $4,000 for the loss of their father. Railway Co. v. Wininger,
Mr. Justice Van Devanter says, in Illinois C. R. Co. v. Behrens,
“Passing from the question of power to that of its exercise, we find that the controlling provision in the act of April 22, 1908, reads as follows: “That every common carrier by railroad, while engaging in commerce between any of the several states, * * * shall be liable in damages to any person suffering injuries while .he is employed by such carrier in such commerce, "or, in case of the death of such employé, to his or her personal representative, * * * for such injury or death resulting in whole or in part from the negligence of any of the officers, agents, or employés of such carrier, or by reason of any defect or insufficiency, due to its negligence, in its cars, enginеs, appliances, machinery, track, roadbed, works, boats, wharves, or other equipment.’ Giving to the words ‘suffering injury while he is employed by such carrier in such commerce’ their natural meaning, as we think must be done, it is clear that Congress intended to confine its action to injuries occurring when the particular service in which the employé is engaged is a part of interstate commerce. The act was so construed in Pederson v. Railway Co.,229 U. S. 146 [33 Sup. Ct. 648,57 L. Ed. 1125 , Ann. Cas. 1914C, 153], It was there said: * * * ‘There cаn be no doubt that a right of recovery thereunder arises only where the injury is suffered while the carrier is engaged in interstate commerce and while the em-ployé is employed by the carrier in such commerce.’ * * * ‘The true test always is: Is the work in question a part of the interstate commerce in which the carrier is engaged?’ And a like view is shown in other cases. * * * Here, at the time of the fatal injury, the intestate was engaged in moving several cars, all loaded with intrastate frеight, from one part of the city to another. That was not a service in interstate commerce, and so the injury and resulting death were not within the statute. That he was expected, upon the completion of that task, to engage in another which would have been a part of interstate commerce, is immaterial under the statute, for by its terms the true test is the nature of the work being done at the time of the injury.”
In the case of Hench v. Pennsylvania Ry. Co.,
This car was not on its own line, was empty, and it is not shown that it had been used in interstate commerce prior to the time it was set in the yard for repairs, nor that it would be so used when repaired. The yard where it was being repaired belonged to a road wholly within this state. The “real or substantial connection” of the employment with interstate commerce, referred to so often by decisions of the United States Supreme Court, does not appear in this case. It must be shown to affect interstate commerce. Por instance, in the Pedеrson Case, supra, the injured party was carrying bolts to repair a bridge which was essential to the carrying on of interstate commerce, and without the use of the bridge, of course, interstate commerce could not pass. Neither could interstate trains pass without the aid of the switchman engaged to keep the switches open or properly turned for the passage of trains, just as it was necessary to keep the track clear of obstructions, аs shown in the case of the man who was employed to sweep the snow from the tracks so that interstate commerce might pass, who was held to have been engaged in interstate commerce. And so with the man injured in placing a drawbar on an engine then being used in interstate commerce. It was an aid and necessary to the carrying on of interstate ' commerce.'
But in this case the failure to repair the car may or may not have interfered with interstate commerce, or may or may not have been an aid thereto.
There is no reason why a petition may not be drawn in the alternative so as to show a cause of action either under the federal Employers’ Liability Act, or under state laws, or upon common law; liability depending *1199 ■upon the development of the facts upon the trial for the cause to be selected. This petition did not, however, declare upon the federal act, but the trial wаs under the state laws. There is no allegation that Littleton was engaged in interstate commerce.
The charge contained ail the necessary elements required upon contributory negligence, assumed risk, etc., under the state law and which would not have been applicable to a trial under the federal act. The mere fact that plaintiff sued as administratrix, as well as for her individual benefit and that of the children, would not be material. If she had proceeded under the federal act, she could only have recovered in her capacity as admin-istratrix, but when she stated that she was proceeding under the state law, as shown by the court’s order overruling appellant’s exceptions, the term “administratrix” was a mere surplusage, and no injury could have resulted to appellant by reason thereof. M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Wulf,
The judgment is somewhat inartistically drawn; but, since the intention of the jury is plain, the judgment will be here reformed so as to read that Roxie E. Littleton recover $8,000 for herself, and for the use and benefit of each of the three children the sum of $4,000. And, as so reformed, the judgment is affirmed.
cSsoFor other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
— .T?nr other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
