Schaff v. Gordon
Schaff v. Gordon
Opinion of the Court
The appellee, C. E. Gordon, sued the appellant, C. E. Schaff, as receiver of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company of Texas, and the Pullman Company, to recover damages in the sum of $3,000, alleged to have been sustained on account «of injuries inflicted by the negligent closing of a Pullman car door upon appellee’s hand and fingers.
There is no controversy over the pleadings. The case was tried before a jury, submitted *639 upon special issues, and upon tlie findings of tlie jury judgment was rendered in favor of the appellee against the appellant for the sum of $500, and in favor of the Pullman Company. The appellant’s motion for a rehearing being overruled, he perfected an appeal. No appeal from the judgment in favor of the Pullman Company was prosecuted.
At the close of the evidence the appellant, by motion in writing and by a special charge, requested the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in his favor. This motion of the appellant was overruled, and said special charge was refused. The appellant excepted to these rulings of the court and by several assignments of error complains of them in this court. The propositions contended for may be stated as follows: First, the evidence fails to raise any issue of negligence on the part of appellant or its servant who closed the door, whereby appellee’s fingers were injured ; second, the evidence fails to show that appellee’s injury was the proximate result of negligence on the part of appellant’s servant who closed .the door; third, the evidence conclusively shows that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence in having his fingers in the crack of the door until they were caught. In support of these propositions appellant cites Railway Co. v. Overall, 82 Tex. 247, 18 S. W. 142.
The facts are without dispute and are substantially as follows: The Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company of Texas was, at the time of the accident in question, in the hands of the appellant as receiver, and tlie Pullman coaches in the train upon which the accident occurred were being used by the receiver as vehicles for the carriage of passengers. The appellee, at the time of receiving the injury complained of, was a passenger upon the train of said receiver en route from Dallas,' Tex., to St. Louis, Mo. his transportation including Pullman accommodations. The lines of railway then being operated by appellant and the train upon which appellee was a passenger crossed Red river a few miles north of Denison, Tex. As the train upon which appellee was a passenger was leaving Denison the appellee, accompanied by Jess Hassell, boarded the rear car, and, passing through two or three coaches, reached the vestibule of the Pullman car in which they had their reservations. When appellee and his friend, Hassell, reached this vestibule, the door leading from it into the Pullman car was standing open, being so held by a catch attached to the inside wall of the ear. Attached to the door was an oil lamp check spring which prevented the door from slamming shut when released from the catch on the wall and caused it to close gradually. If the door was pushed with sufficient force to close it instantly it would break the check. The floor of the vestibule of the car consisted of a platform immediately in front of the car door. On either sidq of this platform were trapdoors which shut down over the steps of the platform leading up from the outside. These trapdoors were down, and they, with the platform, make the floor of the vestibule about seven feet long across the end of the car and three feet wide from the end of the car and car door to the rear wall of the vestibule. The door in the end of the car was about three feet wide. When appellee and his friend, Mr. Hassell, reached the vestibule of the coach in question the train was nearing Red river, and Mr. Has-sell suggested to appellee that they stop and see the Frisc-o bridge over the river, which was east of the bridge of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad and over which appel-lee and Hassell were to pass, but appellee suggested that they go inside the coach. They stopped, however, on the platform, and remained there a minute or- two with the view of seeing the bridge. Mr. Hassell was standing at and leaning against the end of the vestibule faqjng the end door of the car. The appellee, Gordon, was standing next to the end of the car. At this time the outside door of the vestibule which inclosed the steps on the oast side was open. While ap-pellee and Hassell were standing on the platform a negro porter came by, and appel-lee, standing next to the end of the car, stepped to one side to let him pass and placed his hand on the door jamb of the door in the end of the car with his fingers in such position that they could be caught and mashed by the closing of the door. The porter came from towards the rear of the train and passed through the vestibule going north in the direction the train was moving. When the porter got inside the car, without looking back and with his back towards appellee and Hassell, he took hold of the door with his right hand, pulled or jerked it from its fastening, passed on and the door closed, mashing appellee’s fingers. According to the testimony of Mr. Hassell, he did not see the porter until he caught hold of the car door, and there is no positive testimony that the porter knew that appellee’s hand was on the facing of the door or door jamb; nor does it appear that he knew of the accident. The porter did not stop on the vestibule, but passed right on through the end door into the coach, and from the inside released the dopr from the catch and caused it to close. The appellee, in stating how he got hurt, testified, in substance, that he and Hassell had stopped on the rear end of the Pullman in which they had their berths for possibly a minute or a minute and a half; that he was standing on the main part of the platform in front of the door preparing to go in, and Mr. Hassell says, “Let’s stop and see the bridgethat he said, “No; let’s go in the smoker;” that about that time the porter was coming back of him; that he stepped out of the way and let the porter pass, and as *640 lie did so lie reached up and took hold of the door, inasmuch as the outside door, that is, the door from the vestibule to the ground, was open; that he did not see the porter’s face and could not identify him; that he saw the porter when he took hold of the door and pulled it loose from the little bracket, and that the porter kept on going; that he was off his balance when he stepped out of the way and reached over with his hand to push the door open; and that he was in. such a position that he could not very well push the door open. He further testified that it was the edge of the door where the hinges were attached which caught his fingers as that edge closed toward the jamb to which the door was hinged; that the door was stopped before it got clear to and locked; that his hand was in the jamb of the 'door when the negro passed through the door; that he had to step out of his way to let him by, and he passed by his (appellee’s) hand while it was on the door jamb; that the porter did not stop and look, at his hand, and that he did not know whether he saw it or not; that the porter passed right on by him, and as he went on inside he caught hold of the edge of the door on the knob or latch side, and as the door came shut he (appellee) caught it and kept it from coming entirely to, but that it closed sufficiently to catch and mash his fingers flat and cut them open to the first joint. The porter did not testify on the trial of the case.
The contention of the appellee is that whether appellant’s servant in closing the door failed to exercise that degree of care for his safety as would have been exercised by a person of the highest degree of care and caution under the same or similar circumstances, and whether. the injury to ap-pellee’s hand was the direct result of the want of such care on the part of said servant, and whether the appellee, in placing his fingers in the crack of the door and leaving them there until .caught by the closing of the door, exercised such care for his own safety as a person of ordinary prudence would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances, become and were, under the evidence, issues of fact and properly submitted to the jury for their determination. To sustain this contention the ease of Railway Co. v. Neely, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 611, 101 S. W. 481, is cited.
Do the facts show conclusively that the appellee was guilty of contributory negligence? This, like the question of negligence on the part of the servant of appellant who closed the car door, was, in our opinion, an issue of fact for the jury. The facts in relation to the issue of contributory negligence here are quite similar, we believe, to those upon that question in Bailway Co. v. Neely, and this court held, in effect, that they presented a question of fact, and not one of law. Our Supreme Court, in Lee v. Railway Co., 89 Tex. 583, 36 S. W. 63, said:
“Negligence, whether of the plaintiff or defendant, is generally a question of fact, and becomes a question of law to be decided by the court only when the act done is in violation of some law, or when the facts are undisputed and admit of but one inference regarding the care of the party in doing the act in question; in other words, to authorize the court to take the question from the jury, the evidence must he of such character that there is no room for ordinary minds to differ as to the conclusion to be drawn from it.”
The act charged as constituting contributory negligence in this case infringes no law, and the evidence is not of such character that there is no room for ordinary minds to differ as to the conclusion to he drawn from it. In other words, the facts of the case do not “fill the requirements of the law in order to constitute negligence as matter of law.”
In Romine v. Railway Co., 24 Ind. App. 230, 56 N. E. 245, it appeared that a passenger while looking through an outside door of the car was resting his hand on a closet door at his side. The conductor saw him, but opened the closet door without warning. The passenger’s fingers slipped in the crack of the door and were injured when the conductor immediately afterward closed it. The court held that the questions of the defendant’s negligence and the plaintiff’s contributory negligence were for the jury. The court said:
“The question of negligence must be submitted to the jury when there is room for difference of opinion between reasonable men as to the inferences which might fairly he drawn from *642 conceded facts as well as where there is room for such difference as to the existence of the facts from which it is proposed to infer negligence. ⅜ * * Where the inferences- to be drawn from the proof are not certain and un-controvertible, the question of negligence cannot be decided as a question of law, by directing a verdict, but must be submitted to the jury.”
It follows from what we have said that, in our opinion, the case is not ruled by the decision in Railway Co. v. Overall, cited by appellant. In that case Overall was standing upon the platform of the car with his had voluntarily resting upon the jamb of the car door. While the train was standing still and Overall in this position, the brakeman suddenly, without knowledge that Overall’s hand was upon the door jamb, closed the door and the end of Overall’s finger was caught between the cleat and the door and injured. The only evidence that the brakeman saw Overall at the time of or before the accident, was the statement of Overall that “the man who shut the door could see me and see where my hand was when he shut the door.” As was said in the Neely Case:
“This evidence did not show that the brakeman saw Overall, or that he knew he was in a leaning position against the door facing, or that he knew or had any reason to believe that with the train standing a passenger would assume a position of danger or voluntarily, without any jostle or moving train, place himself in a position of peril; nor did said facts so proved call for the exercise of any degree of care on the part of the brakeman.”
The facts in the case at bar are materially different from the facts pointed out in the Overall Case, and if the Neely Case is distinguishable in its facts from the Overall case, so that both may stand without presenting a material conflict, likewise, in.our opinion, is the present case distinguishable from it, and is not in conflict with it.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
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