216 S.W. 391 | Tex. | 1919
This action was brought by defendants in error, who are the widow and children of Jno. C. Watts, against plaintiff in error, St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas, to recover damages arising from the death of Jno. C. Watts, who was run over by a switch engine of plaintiff in error, while he was lying on its track at Texarkana, where he had been thrown or had fallen, in alighting from a moving train of the Texas Pacific Railway Company, which he had boarded as an escort of his daughter, who was a passenger.
The questions presented here require us to determine, first, what duty, with respect to the deceased, devolved on plaintiff in error; and, second, whether the defense of contributory negligence was available to plaintiff in error.
The charge of the trial court authorized the jury to find for defendants in error if they found, in substance, that Jno. C. Watts was making a use of the track, which came within plaintiff in error's implied permission, and if they found that the servants *112 of plaintiff in error operating the switch engine, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have discovered the presence of Jno. C. Watts on the track, and could have avoided striking him, and that plaintiff in error's servants failed to exercise such care, and that such failure was negligence, and that the death of Jno. C. Watts was caused by such negligence, and that Jno. C. Watts, on account of injuries previously received, was unable to remove himself from the track or did not realize the danger of remaining thereon.
The trial court refused to instruct the jury to find for plaintiff in error if its employees used such care to discover the presence of Jno. C. Watts on the track and to avoid injuring him, as an ordinarily prudent person would have used under like circumstances at a place not used by licensees; and, also refused to submit the defense of contributory negligence, and rendered judgment, on the jury's findings, for defendants in error, which was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.
We do not think that plaintiff in error's duty to the deceased arose from its license to pedestrians to use the foot-path in crossing its track. As said by the Supreme Court of Maryland, in Western Md. R. Co. v. Kehoe,
In Texas P. Ry. Co. v. Watkins,
The rule stated is supported by the opinions in Houston T.C. Ry. Co. v. Sympkins,
The opinion in Missouri, K. T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Malone,
The facts in this record require that the issue of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased be submitted to the jury.
It cannot be rightly said that the act of alighting from the passenger train had culminated when the deceased first became unconscious. While his act must have been a proximate cause of his injury, in order to defeat a recovery herein, it cannot be said to conclusively appear that one, under all the circumstances, might not reasonably have anticipated injury from a subsequent passing train, as well as precedent immediate injury, as a natural and probable consequence of alighting from the moving train on or near a railroad track.
The law which makes contributory negligence available as a defense in an action for an injury sustained through failure on the part of railway employees, in operating an engine or cars, to exercise ordinary care to discover the person injured and to avoid the *114 infliction of injury is too well settled in this State to warrant us in departing therefrom.
In Texas P. Ry. Co. v. Staggs,
At the term preceding that in which the Staggs case was decided, the Court had carefully pointed out that it was only in cases of discovered peril that the defense of contributory negligence was not permissible, Judge Denman saying that the principle depriving the party inflicting an injury of that defense "has no application in the absence of actual knowledge, on the part of the person inflicting the injury, of the peril of the party injured, in time to avoid the injury by the use of the means and agencies then at hand. If he had no such knowledge the new duty was not imposed, though it be clear that by the exercise of reasonable care he might have acquired same." Texas P. Ry. Co. v. Breadow,
Again it is said in Morgan Bros. v. Missouri K. T. Ry. Co. of Texas,
It is ordered that the judgments of the District Court and of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed and that this cause be remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded.