249 S.W. 1092 | Tex. App. | 1923
The appellee, Mrs. Minnie Johnson, as temporary administratrix, sued the appellant for damages resulting from the death of her husband, W. E. Johnson. The facts alleged and established upon the trial below show that Johnson was at the time of his death employed by the appellant in operating one of its freight trains. The train with which he was connected and on which he was riding when killed consisted of an engine, tender, several box cars, two flat cars, and what is known as a "bobtailed caboose." The two flat cars were next to and in front of the caboose. A "bobtailed caboose" is described as being one with a door in the front end and without any platform. Across that door was an iron bar, about four feet from the floor, securely bolted at both ends. This opening was used by the trainmen in going from the caboose toward the front end of the train and in returning. The space between the flat car and the door of the caboose was about three feet. At the time of the accident Johnson was endeavoring to re-enter the caboose by stepping from the flat car. Just as he stooped to pass under the bar, he fell between the cars and was run over and killed.
The negligence relied on in the trial below was the placing of the iron bar across the door. That issue was submitted to the jury in the following form:
"No. 4. Was it negligence upon the part of the defendant, as `negligence' is hereinbefore defined, to place the iron bar across the door in question?"
The jury answered in the affirmative.
Two principal questions are presented in this appeal. In one the appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding above referred to. The other is based upon the refusal of the court to give a special charge instructing the jury what to consider in answering that question.
There was practically no conflict in the testimony concerning the material facts. It is conceded that under the regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission the appellant had a right to operate a "bobtailed caboose," or one without a front platform. The important question is: Was it negligence to place an iron bar across the doorway as was done in this instance? It is not contended that the authority to use that kind of a caboose included the right to thus obstruct the doorway. Just why this bar was put across that door is not made entirely clear. Counsel for appellant contend that it was for the protection of the employees while riding in the caboose. That, however, seems unlikely, because no such protection appears to have been needed. If we may indulge in inferences from the testimony adduced and the physical facts shown to exist, the probability is this bar was put there to remind employees when passing out through that door that this caboose had no platform at that end, and to prevent them from thoughtlessly stepping into the space intervening between the caboose and the next car. That the presence of the bar rendered passage in and out of the caboose more inconvenient, and incidentally more dangerous, can hardly be doubted.
Testimony was presented by the appellant showing that other railroads had similar equipments upon cabooses of that kind; but there was no such general use shown as *1093
to settle the issue of negligence in the appellant's favor. In determining whether or not a particular thing is negligence the inquiry is, not what other railroad companies have done, or are doing, but what an ordinarily prudent person would have done under the same or similar circumstances. Ry. Co. v. Foth,
There is in this case no question of assumed risk. Under the Act of 1921 (Gen. Laws 37th Leg. c. 100; Vernon's Ann.Civ.St.Supp. 1922, art. 6645) that defense is not available. The appellee adduced evidence tending to prove that this particular method of obstructing the entrance to the caboose rendered ingress more hazardous. However, the physical facts were such that the jurors might have arrived at that conclusion from a common knowledge of such mechanical conditions. The fact that this bar was placed there to protect those employees who were in the caboose was not, alone, sufficient to justify the appellant in making entrance from the outside more dangerous to others. The jury had a right to conclude that some other method, equally as effective for protecting those within the caboose and less dangerous to others outside, might have been adopted. The conduct of the appellant must be measured by these general rules which determine whether or not it has performed its legal duty to its employees, in providing a safe place in which to work, considering the safety of all those to be affected.
At the instance of the appellant the court gave to the jury the following special charge:
"You are charged in connection with question No. 4 that, although you may believe from the evidence that it would have been safer for the trainmen in entering the car had there been no bar across the end door, yet if you believe from the evidence that the defendant in the exercise of ordinary care and caution reached the conclusion and determined that the bar would add to the greater safety of its employees while operating the train, then it will be your duty to answer the question, `No.'"
Several other special charges relating to the same issue were requested by the appellant and refused. Each refusal is the basis of an assignment of error.
In their argument counsel for appellant invoked the rule announced in the case of Ry. Co. v. McGlamory,
We are of the opinion that the substance of charges such as those here under discussion falls more within the domain of argument of counsel than within the province of the court in giving instructions from the bench. Where unclouded issues of fact are specially submitted, the giving of such charges tends more to confuse than to aid jurors in their deliberations.
There was no error in refusing the charges requested, and the judgment will be affirmed.