Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Sandy
Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Sandy
Opinion of the Court
The appellee, J. H. Sandy, recovered a judgment in the court below against the appellant for $1,500 for personal injuries. The testimony shows that in December, 1908, appellee was engaged in the appellant’s service as conductor on one of its freight trains running between Ft. Worth and Biard. On the morning of December 11th, at 1:5o1 o’clock, appellee’s train left Thurber Junction with 17 cars of coal destined for Ft. Worth. It arrived at Weather-ford at 5:15 a. m. of the same day, and was there stopped for the purpose of enabling the appellee to register its arrival, as required by the rules of the appellant company. After having performed that duty, appellee walked back to bis train, and gave the engineer the signal to start. He thus describes his movements and the circumstances attending the injury: “I gave the engineer a signal to pull out, and I started to walk back about three ear lengths west from the station, and, as the caboose came along, I attempted to get on. I grabbed hold of the handhold as we always do, on the rear end of the caboose, and I made about three steps. *499 When 1 did that I stepped onto a chunk, or something or other, I don’t know whether it was coal, clinker, or rock; hut it was some hard substance, which raised me off the ground and turned over under my foot and threw me right around under the step, skinning both of these legs clear up to my knees, and my ankles, and it drug me about 75 or 100 feet before it tore me loose, and it threw me right on that hard pavement right in front of the AVeatherford station house; right in front of the passenger house. That hard pavement at Weatherford goes up above the station house there about, I guess, 30 or 35 or maybe 40 feet. X got on that hard pavement. Just east of the end of that hard stuff is where I attempted to get on. * * * After X gave him the signal, I walked on towards the west. The caboose reached me about three car lengths from that' door. I had gotten back to a point opposite the west end of the building, just about even with the west end. I was right close to the edge of that cement. That cement extended down right close to the track. * * * I did not see this substance I struck until just as I was striking it. Just as I struck onto it, X saw it roll out from under my foot, saw it roll towards the track, right towards the track. I said it was about as big as my two fists. I don’t know whether it was a piece of coal or a clinker. It was some dark substance. I don’t know what it was.”
The first error assigned is the action of the court permitting the appellee to read in evidence the deposition of one T. O. Lewis, a brakeman on the train with the appellee. The hill of exceptions shows that, when the deposition was offered in evidence, the plaintiff objected to its introduction, “because it is not a deposition within the meaning of the law; that there were no attorneys of record for the defendant, and could not be until an answer was filed, which was filed on the appearance day of the April term of the court following the February, in which the interrogatories and original petition were filed. Hence service was never had on anybody. Therefore the deposition is not a deposition in the meaning of the law.” The bill fails to state the evidence of any facts in support of the objection made, and, if any appear iu other portions of the record, counsel for appellant have not referred to it. The substance of the objection is that notice of filing the interrogatories was served upon .certain attorneys who had not at the time become attorneys of record, and that the service was therefore of no effect.
It is urgently contended that the facts of this case fall within the principles discussed and applied in the cases of M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Romans, 121 S. W. 1104, and M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Jones, 125 S. W. 309. In each of these cases the Supreme Court reversed the judgments of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals,'upon the ground that the evidence was insufficient to show negligence.
*500 In the Romans Case the plaintiff in the suit was in the employ of the defendant, loading cars with gnmho at a plant owned and controlled by the latter. At this plant there were three large embankments of burnt gumbo in parallel rows several hundred yards in length and several feet high. The plaintiff was injured by stepping into a hole approximately 2% feet long by 2 feet wide and 1% feet deep. This hole was filled, or nearly so, with fine dust, or soot, from the gumbo, which obscured the hole and prevented the plaintiff from seeing it or knowing of its existence. The -railway company had a track crew who worked there and moved the track and leveled up the ground when necessary. The evidence did not disclose how the hole came to be there, or show any circumstances by which the cause of its being there could have been conjectured. The evidence was held to be legally insufficient to show liability. The court said: “The fact upon which plaintiff must found a right of recovery is the existence of a hole concealed by the soft matter with which it was apparently filled, for we cannot agree that such a hole unconcealed at a place like this would be any more dangerous, or any more evidence of negligence, than a like hole would be if located by a wagon into which a servant is shoveling dirt or other matter. The risk from such a condition would be so slight and so obvious that the servant might well be expected to guard himself ’against it, and this would require no more experience than is possessed by the average adult. The place here in question is not like a depot platform or a railroad track or other similar place, and the same diligence in keeping it is not to be expected.”
In the Jones Case the plaintiff was a brakeman on one of the railway company’s trains, and was injured by stepping off and onto a bolt which had been left lying in the railway yards. The evidence showed that the bolt was one of a kind used in the machinery of the railway company; but how it got in the yards the evidence did not disclose. It was also shown that the yards were inspected at reasonable intervals, and objects of this kind, removed. There was testimony to the effect that one or more of those charged with the duty of inspection passed along by the place where this bolt was lying, and that, if it had been there, they would have seen and removed it, but that they did not see it. The court held that the presence of the bolt in the yards at that particular place might as easily be attributed to the acts of some third party as to the railway company or any of its em-ployés, and that there was no evidence upon Which to support a conclusion that there was not sufficient provision made for inspecting and removing such objects from the yards. The court said: “In order to constitute it (negligence), the bolt must have been put on the track by some employé, or its presence there must have been known to some of them before the accident, or must have continued long enough to justify the inference that the failure to know it was due to a want of proper care.”
It will be observed that the conditions relied on in both of the above cases in order to establish negligence are essentially different from those involved in this. In the Romans Case it was held that the mere presence of a hole in the ground at that particular place should not be considered sufficient evidence of negligence to form the basis of liability. In the Jones Case the ruling was predicated upon the conclusion that the presence of the bolt at the place where the accident occurred was as easily attributable to the agency of a third party as to that of the railway company or its employés. It seems that in this ease the court reached the further conclusion that the evidence showing the exercise of proper care on the part of the railway company in making inspections for the purpose of discovering and removing such obstructions was undisputed, and should be accepted as true. In the case here under consideration the evidence justifies the following conclusions: That the presence on the platform at the place where the appellee was injured of such obstruction as that which caused his fall produced a situation which might well be regarded as dangerous to such employés; that the appellant appreciated that danger, and had employed an agent to remove such during the daytime; that the obstruction was a lump of coal, or a clinker, and was on the platform through some agency over which the appellant and its employés had control; that no provision was made for inspecting the premises at night, and for a period of nearly 12 hours immediately preceding the accident, for the purpose of removing such obstructions. We think the testimony was sufficient to support the judgment. M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Kennedy, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 466, 112 S. W. 339; El Paso & S. W. Ry. Co. v. Alexander, 117 S. W. 927.
The remaining assignments of error are without merit, and are overruled.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Reference
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- Texas P. Ry. Co. v. Sandy. [Fn&8224]
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