264 S.W. 582 | Tex. App. | 1924
Appellant insists it appeared from a preponderance of the testimony that the train operatives did ring the bell and blow the whistle of the locomotive as the train approached the crossing. He further insists that a finding that said operatives were guilty of negligence in running the train at the speed they did was not authorized by either appellee's pleading or the testimony. He further insists that the testimony did not warrant a finding that said operatives discovered the peril of appellee's wife and children from the train in time to have avoided the accident resulting in their death. And he further insists that it appeared from both appellee's pleadings and the testimony that he and his wife were guilty of contributory negligence which was a proximate cause of the collision. The contentions, and others germane thereto, will be disposed of in the order they have been stated.
1. The testimony on the issue as to whether the train operatives sounded the whistle and rang the bell of the locomotive as required by the statute (article 6564, Vernon's Sayles' Ann.Civ.St. 1914) was conflicting. The finding of the jury in the negative, involved in their verdict, had ample support in testimony they had a right to believe.
2. The rate of speed at which a railroad company may lawfully operate its trains over country public road crossings in this state is not restricted by any statute. Hence it was not negligence as a matter of law, and the court did not tell the jury it was, to operate the train in question over the crossing at the rate of from 50 to 65 miles an hour, the speed at which the testimony indicated it was operated. McDonald v. Railway Co.,
The road appellee's wife and children were traveling was "a frequently traveled" one. It was downgrade to the crossing from a point several hundred feet west thereof, and it curved sharply to the south, running parallel with the railroad track, just after it crossed same. The railroad track was down grade to the crossing from a point about 1,300 feet south thereof, and the track turned slightly to the northwest immediately after it crossed the dirt road. The view of operatives of a train approaching the crossing from the south of persons traveling from the west to the crossing over the public road was obstructed by trees, bushes, and weeds on the south side of said public road and the west side of the railway company's right of way from the crossing south about 1,300 feet. A person traveling in an automobile and approaching the crossing from the west could not see a train approaching from the south until his automobile got upon the railway company's right of way. The train in question was running several hours behind its schedule time, and no train was then due at the crossing. The train operatives did not ring the bell nor sound the whistle of the locomotive as it approached the crossing.
It is clear, we think, that the jury had a right to conclude that an ordinarily prudent person under the circumstances stated would not have operated the train over the crossing at the speed indicated by the testimony. Railway Co. v. Tucker,
"Neither was there error in authorizing a finding for appellee if the train approached the crossing at a negligent rate of speed. While ordinarily the operatives of a railway train are not required to slacken its speed in approaching public crossings, yet the circumstances may be such as that they ought to do so. In the present case, considering the allegations and proof tending to support them — that no bell was being rung, no sign-board was erected, and the engine equipped with an insufficient headlight — the jury might properly have concluded that the train was being operated at a dangerous and negligent rate of speed."
Appellant insists, further, that if the testimony authorized the submission of such an issue, the charge of the court submitting it was erroneous, in that it did not explain to the jury "what circumstances and conditions" would warrant a finding that the train operatives were negligent in operating the train at the speed they did operate it. We think it not only was not error to not specify the circumstances more definitely than the court did, but that it would have been on the weight of the testimony, and therefore error, to have done so.
3. If the train operatives discovered the peril of appellee's wife and children from the train in time to have avoided the collision, and failed to use "every means then within their power, consistent with the safety of the train," to avoid the collision, they were guilty of negligence for which appellant was liable, notwithstanding appellee or his wife may have been guilty of negligence which was a contributing cause of the accident. Railway Co. v. Breadow,
4. It did not appear from the allegations in appellee's pleadings, as we construe *585 them, that his wife was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to go over the crossing as she did. Therefore, unless it appeared as a matter of law from the testimony that she was guilty of such negligence, it was not error to instruct the jury, as the court did, that the burden of proof to establish the affirmative of that issue was on appellant.
The testimony of the fireman indicated that appellee's wife did not stop and listen for a train nor look for one before going upon the crossing. It is argued that this testimony overcame the presumption the law would indulge that she used ordinary care to ascertain if a train was approaching before going upon the crossing (Hovey v. Sanders [Tex. Civ. App.]
"That the failure of one about to go over a public railroad crossing to look and listen for an approaching train does not, of itself, constitute negligence as a matter of law." Phillips, C.J., in Trochta v. Railway Co. (Tex.Com.App.)
And certainly such failure would not establish negligence as a matter of law where, as here, the jury might have said, the traveler's view of the approaching train was obstructed and the operatives of the train failed to discharge the duty the statute imposed upon them to warn her of its approach by ringing the bell and sounding the whistle of the locomotive. Railway Co. v. Shelton,
Next, it is urged that it appeared that appellee's wife failed to reduce the speed of the automobile to not exceeding six miles an hour before it reached a "point not nearer than 30 feet of the * * * track," as provided in article 820l, Vernon's Ann.Pen. Code Supp. 1918, and hence that she was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. The contention is based on the testimony of the fireman that "his best judgment" was that the automobile was "going between 8 and 12 miles an hour" as it approached the crossing, and the testimony of the witness McCoslin that it was "traveling something like 10 miles an hour." The fireman further testified: "I could not really say what rate of speed the car was going." And McCoslin further testified: "As to the rate of speed she (appellee's wife) was traveling, from where I was I could not tell how fast she was traveling." It is obvious, we think, that the testimony specified, and there was none other, did not conclusively establish that the automobile was moving at a speed of exceeding six miles an hour as it approached the crossing. But if we thought it did we would overrule appellant's contention, because the statute invoked applies only "where the view of the crossing is obscured, either wholly or partially," and there was no testimony showing the crossing in question to have been so obscured. Railway Co. v. Mallard,
Among the instructions of the court to the jury, with reference to the issue of contributory negligence, was one which told them to find for appellant, other conditions concurring, if they believed a person of ordinary prudence "would have looked and listened (and that appellee's wife did not) for an approaching train before driving on the crossing." Appellant did not object to the instruction, but requested the court to give two special charges — one of which, had it been given, would have instructed the jury to find for appellant if they believed appellee's wife negligently failed to look for the train, and the other of which would have instructed them to find for appellant if they believed she negligently failed to listen for the train. The complaint here is predicated on the refusal of the court to give the requested special charges. Appellant insists that such refusal was error under the doctrine recognized in Railway Co. v. McGlamory, 89 Tex.Sup. 635, 35 S.W. 1058, and other cases. But the ruling of the court clearly was not error, because the jury should have found for appellee as they did notwithstanding they believed appellee's wife failed to look or failed to listen for the train, if they also believed that the train operatives discovered her perilous position in time to have avoided the collision.
Other contentions than those already mentioned are presented in appellant's brief. One of the number is that appellee was not entitled to recover anything on account of the death of his children, because, "in the very nature of things," it is asserted, one of them being less than two years and the other only seven months old, he suffered no pecuniary loss by their death. The contention is without merit. Railway Co. v. Cullen (Tex.Civ.App.)
Contentions not disposed of by what has been said are believed to be without merit also, and are overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.