Freeman v. Terry
Freeman v. Terry
Opinion of the Court
The action is by William Terry for' damages for injury to his right foot, which was caught by the drawheads or coupling apparatus of one of defendant’s trains, while plaintiff was in the act of crossing over between the cars.
The negligence of defendant, alleged as the cause of the injury, was, in substance, that the train in question was a long freight train which had stopped at the station of the town of Dilley, and for several hours stood there, blocking several of the public streets and thoroughfares of the town. That while the train so obstructed said public crossings many persons and citizens of the town going from one part of the town to the other were obliged to and did cross over and between or under the cars, and defendant’s servants knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, the people were so crossing the train, and it was the duty of said employés not to move the cars without giving notice or warning of their intention to move them; and, as said cars were standing across two of the public and most used streets of the town, it was the duty of said employés to exercise reasonable care to look out at said crossings and to exercise reasonable eare to see and know that said crossings were clear of persons attempting to cross before moving the cars. That at the time said cars were moved, whereby plaintiff’s injury was caused, they were moved without any notice or warning whatever, and plaintiff had no knowledge or notice that the cars were about to be moved, and defendant’s em-ployés in charge of and operating the train negligently failed to keep or maintain a reasonable lookout at said place, or to exercise ordinary care to see that said crossings were clear, and that there were no persons engaged in attempting to cross over between the cars at said place, but suddenly put the same in motion without having given any signal or warning, and without having kept or maintained a reasonable lookout at such places, and without having exercised reasonable care to see that these crossings were clear of persons attempting to cross, and the said several acts of negligence directly contributed to cause plaintiff’s injury.
Defendant demurred, and answered by general denial, and that at the time defendant was loading cattle, and, in order to do so, it was necessary to place the cattle cars composing the train at the cattle chute successively, which was done in the usual manner by placing the door of a car at the door or gate of the chute, loading the car, and then moving the train up the distance of another car; that, in order to do this, it was necessary for the train to block the particular crossing at the time in question; that while the train was standing there defendant was ready to-cut the cars, upon request, to allow any one to pass, and did so several times during the time the train was standing there, and any one could, and many persons did, with the knowledge of said employés, pass around either end of the train, without requesting or waiting for the train to be opened for them; that if the train was blocking the crossing plaintiff could have safely gone around either end of the train, but instead, and without requesting the train to be cut, and without waiting to see whether it would clear the crossing, he ieaped up between the ears in the dark, and placed his foot upon the drawheads just as the train was moved; that said employés had no knowledge at the time of the presence of plaintiff at the place, nor that he was attempting to climb between the cars; and that his conduct was negligence, which was the proximate cause of his injury. Plaintiff obtained a verdict for $7,500.
The first assignment of error alleges that the court erred in denying defendant’s motion to direct a verdict for defendant after plaintiff had introduced his evidence; appellant contending by its propositions that the evidence showed plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.
The testimony disclosed the following facts: Defendant’s employés were engaged in *1018 handling and loading a long stock train of 19 stock cars and several other cars at the station of Dilley. The track upon which the train stood ran practically north and south through the town, dividing it into east and west portions. South of the depot and the •stock pen, the railroad crossed Miller street, the principally traveled street or crossing from one side of the town to the other. To the north was another parallel street, also crossed. Prom some time in the afternoon, about 3:30 o’clock, until'after dark, this work of loading the train was in progress, and these streets blocked most, if not all, of the time. The engine was to the north, and when one car was loaded the train would be pushed back south until another car was at the pen to be bedded and loaded, and so on •during the afternoon. The plaintiff, a doctor, had occasion to go from the east side of the town to the west side, between 6 and 7 o’clock, to see a patient. He came to the crossing on Miller street, which he found obstructed by the train. There was nobody on that side, and everybody was on the opposite side, up about where the stock pen was. He testified that he stood and waited a while to see if there was any occasion to move the train at that time, and hearing the men whooping and “hollering” down at the pen, and knowing that they were loading cattle, he passed over between two cars, and while he was doing so the ears moved forward and backward and jammed together, and his foot was caught and injured. He stated that, before attempting to cross over, he stood there “two or three minutes — a minute or so” — and looked up the track toward the engine and saw it up beyond the pen, and looked the other way and there was nobody there, and he heard no signals at all.
The witness Pinch testified that when he went to his supper he crossed at this place by crawling under the train, and after supper came back and crawled through again, and he met plaintiff about 30 steps from the crossing, on the east side of the track, on Miller street, after he had crossed himself, and that he did not‘hear the bell ring or whistle blow after he met plaintiff.
Another witness, Lawrence, testified that he crossed between the cars over the couplings between the stock pens and the Miller street crossing about 6 o’clock, going from the east part of the town to the west part, and afterwards recrossed at the same place in the same way about 7 o’clock; that before he did so he took occasion to notice if there were any signals given, and heard the noise down at the pen, and heard they were running cattle into the cars, and went over.
There was testimony that other adult people crossed the train on Miller street by going over or under the cars during the time the streets were obstructed by these ears. We need not refer to school children who did so. There was testimony that persons using ' Miller street, to avoid going across the train, would have to go some distance in either direction to go around the train, and the walk was a hard one.
The motion to instruct for defendant upon the testimony as it was when plaintiff rested his case necessarily involved the claim that plaintiff had shown no negligence of defendant, or had conclusively shown contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff in undertaking to cross the train, under the circumstances.
*1019
IVe could assent to the proposition that such person could not recover where he knew the train was about to start, or liable to start, at any moment. But, as heretofore explained, it appears that plaintiff did not know this, and had reason to think otherwise. Under this evidence, plaintiff cannot be regarded as a trespasser (Littlejohn v. Railway Co., 49 S. C. 12, 26 S. E. 967), and it therefore cannot be held that no duty was owing pedestrians along the highway until they were discovered in a place of danger. Railway v. Green, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 5, 49 S. W. 670. That a railroad permits its train to obstruct a highway for an unreasonable time is itself an act of negligence. It seems to us that, where a train is held obstructing a street unnecessarily and for an unreasonable time, it is a wrongdoer, and not entitled to precedence in the use of the street as against the right of the public to pass, and is in no position to say that a person crossing over its train in using the highway is a trespasser on its premises and property. The business of loading these cars could have been conducted, with some additional trouble on the part of the em-ployés, and the crossing or crossings left open practically all of the time. They chose to conduct it in such a way as to keep the street unnecessarily blocked from early in the afternoon until after night. The street where plaintiff met his injury was the principal street of the town, leading from one part of the town to the other, and the evidence shows it was considerably used during that afternoon. Some pedestrians took the pains to go out of their way around the train; but others crossed over or under the cars. The facts showing that the crossing was a thoroughfare, and the main one in the town, and that the citizens had frequent occasion to use it, created a condition of things which called for the use, by the employés, of «orne care for the safety of those who, it must have known, might attempt to cross at that place. At least, the jury could have so viewed it. It could reasonably have been anticipated that some persons, at least, would undertake to cross over between the cars, where they were held on the track obstructing the crossing for a considerable time.
As stated in Schlemmer v. Railway Co., 205 U. S. 1, 27 Sup. Ct. 407, 51 L. Ed. 681: “Aside from the knowledge possessed by brakemen that the plaintiff and his companions and others were about the cars, a jury might well find, from all the circumstances that the train operatives, in the exercise of ordinary care, ought to have anticipated that persons might be in the act of crossing, or be on, or between, or about, the cars, and that not to give warning before moving the train would result in injury.”
Assuming the first portion of this charge to be sound and applicable to the facts of this case, the rest of the charge was incorrect. What follows would have told the jury that defendant was under no duty to give signals in this instance, unless the em-ploySs had received notice that persons were crossing or in the act of crossing at the particular time, which would have been an improper restriction. In addition to this, the final portion of the charge was on the weight of the evidence. Its effect was that defendant had a right to block the streets with its train during all the time it took to bed and load this train, which consisted of 19 stock ears and consumed 5 or 6 hours; and it is too plain for argument that the charge would not have allowed the jury to consider the practicability of leaving the crossings open during the progress of the bedding and loading.
We overrule this assignment. Appellant’s purpose was to have the jury charged not to consider, upon the issue of contributory negligence, the evidence that certain school children crossed the track under or between the cars. Defendant got this instruction, and by the qualification the jury were in effect told that such was the law, but that they could consider the evidence on the issue of notice to defendant that the crossing was being used. The jury must have understood that it was upon this issue, and not the issue of contributory negligence, that it could be considered. We think it cannot be denied that the court was correct in what it stated in the qualification. And it is by no means clear that the court did not err in appellant’s favor by giving the charge asked.
The tenth complains of the first paragraph of the court’s charge. None of the criticisms is found to be well taken.
From what has been stated, we overrule the eleventh and twelfth assignments, which complain of the overruling of the motion for new trial.
The sixteenth complains of witnesses being allowed to testify to their having crossed under or between the cars on that afternoon. It appears that the bill of exceptions does not include one witness who so testified. But, as already explained in this opinion, the testimony was admissible, both on the issue of notice in its bearing on defendant’s negligence and of plaintiff’s contributory negligence.
We overrule the seventeenth, which complains of the verdict being too large.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Freeman v. Terry. [Fn&8224]
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