Bogue v. Texas Traction Co.
Bogue v. Texas Traction Co.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
We copy from the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals the following statement with reference to the case:
“This is a suit by appellee to recover of the Texas Traction Company damages for personal injuries received by him by reason of the car operated by him on the Metropolitan Street Railway running into the rear end of a car operated by the Traction Company on the said street railway track.
“Appellant pleaded the general issue, assumed risk and contributory negligence.
“A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee and appellant prosecutes this appeal.
“The first assignment of error complains of the court for refusing to submit to the jury a special instruction as follows: ‘You are instructed in this case to return a verdict for the Texas Traction Company/
“The facts show that Bogue was an employe of the Metropolitan Street
“The accident occurred at 11:45 o’clock at night; the incoming interurban car turned out of Bryan Street into Peak Street ahead of the city car; as the turn was made the city car was some four or five hundred feet north on Peak Street. Bogue, the motorman, saw the interurban as it swung around the corner at Bryan and passed over the switch to the right-hand track, coming in; by that time Bogue had approached still nearer the car; he could see the interurban because its side was turned towards him and the inside was brilliantly lighted with electric lights. Bogue discovered at that time that there were no lights upon the rear end of the interurban car. The collision occurred at Swiss Avenue crossing, being the second crossing south of Bryan, The surface" is level from Bryan to Swiss, rising just a little. The incoming interurban had stopped on the south side of Swiss Avenue about the same time the outgoing interurban came up along side of the incoming car and stopped, or almost stopped. At this time the city car approached Swiss Avenue from the north.
“Appellee testified: ‘There were no red lights on the rear end of the incoming interurban car; I discovered that just after I hit it, and before he taken the cross over on Bryan Street I did .pot see any red lights on the rear end' of it. The first time I discovered there were no red lights on it was after it had turned into Peak Street. After it passed I did not think very much about it. I knew it would pull right off and leave me like they always do. I did not think anything about running behind a car that had no red lights on it. I was not dreaming of any such thing as running behind that car; did not know anything about it, never had thought of it. I was not expecting to run into it. When I first saw it I never thought much about it, only I thought it did not have any markers on the back of the car. I have seen them several times sinbe. I don’t know that I ever noticed it before. I know that at that time they did not often carry them, but did not know it at that time. I also knew that a bright light was shining in my face; I think that if you were going south and following another car going south and there is a car on the other track going north, there
“ ‘The car was in good condition, except a little tight with the brakes kicking. A kicking brake is one that is not adjusted right and jerks a' little. ' I was pretty well qualified to perform my duties and thought I understood what they were. I familiarized myself with the rules and 'regulation^;" had them furnished me by my superiors -in the service
'' 'The rule is that when one car is standing still and you are approaching with another car, the speed is three miles an hour, and over switches the same way. ... I don’t know of any rule of the interurban company that when one interurban meets another it had to come to a stop, and there is no reason that I know of for the northbound car to stop when it met the southbound. I never had any order to put any lights or signals on the rear end of my car. Our instructions are to keep our headlights cut out on the rear end of our cars. The interurban cars put signals on the back end of their cars because they are easily seen and that is why they used red lights instead of white lights. I don’t know whether -they had been running with red lights back there in the rear before I was hurt or not. When you are meeting one of these interurban cars with a bright headlight burning you are not able to tell whether the car is moving or not until you get pretty close to it.’ Bogue made a signed written statement to his company within a few hours after the accident. He said: 'When I first saw the car I was only 15 or 20 feet away from it. It was standing and I was running about ten or twelve miles an hour when I first saw it. The Texas Traction can; had met there and had stoppel. The one going north had the headlight burning very bright and blinded me so I could not see the other one. There was no red light on the rear end of the southbound Sherman ear. There were no lights of any kind. They were about a car length south on Swiss Avenue. When I. first saw the ■ Sherman car, I set up my brakes and reversed and blew the overhead. Then I ran into the Sherman car. The front end of my car was crushed in and the top of the controller was turned loose but never fell. I had my foot under the bottom of the controller and I think when the top was turned loose it fell back and caught my toe under the edge of it is what hurt my foot. I was knocked down, but fell down against the end- of the car. I could see the headlight on the northbound car from the time I crossed Bryan Street until I struck the southbound car. I have had no orders about passing Sherman cars. I had several passengers on my car and none of them were hurt. I am not hurt anywhere except my foot. Dr. Doolittle saw my foot; he said there were no broken bones. My car was not in good condition, the brakes were bad. I had not reported
“One of the printed rules of the street car company reads as follows : ‘When passing cars that are at a standstill on opposite tracks, ears that are about to stop, or when passing cars in any part of the city where the street traffic is heavy, or pedestrians or vehicles are nearby, the car must be slowed down to a speed not exceeding three miles per hour, and must be" under absolute control so that instant stop is possible/ Another rule: ‘Cars must be under control crossing intersecting streets. Cars running in opposite directions must not cross intersecting streets, steam or electric railway tracks at the same time. The car reaching the street, steam or electric railway tracks first will have the right of way and the other-car must wait until the first car has passed over/
“The evidence was conflicting with reference to the interurban car having a light on its rear end at the time of the collision and it was sufficient to support the jury’s finding that there was none. It also shows that appellee was injured by the collision. Plaintiff offered in evidence an ordinance under date 1877, of the City of Dallas, Chapter 4, entitled: ‘Buies governing the operation of street railways; street railways subject to the conditions of this chapter.’ It was provided that the rules and regulations concerning the running and operation of street railway cars shall be binding upon every person, firm or corporation operating a street railway within or leading into the city. Section 8: ‘The cars after sunset shall be provided with signal lights.’ It is shown that in 1908, Texas Traction Company owned and operated an interurban railway from Sherman to Dallas, having tracks, right of way, depots, etc., and running into the city over the lines of the city street railway by virtue of an ordinance of the city granting the right and permission to operate its cars over the track of certain railway companies, and that said ordinance was granted subject to the existing charter and ordinances of the City of Dallas and such future charter and ordinances as may be hereafter passed, etc. It was also shown by the city charter adopted in 1907, that interurban railways are therein defined to be, within the meaning of the charter, ‘railways operating their cars by electricity for the carriage of freight and passengers for hire, not wholly within the city and its suburbs, but as lines extending from the City of Dallas and its suburbs to other towns, cities or villages/ ‘That the Board of Commissioners shall have power, subject to the terms and conditions contained in this charter, to grant to a person or corporation desiring to extend an interurban railway into the city, the right to lay tracks and operate cars over the streets or other property of the city and over the tracks of other street railways for a term not exceeding twenty years.’ Also,- ‘The right mentioned in the preceding section shall be granted by ordinance only, which shall not be finally passed until after
The Court of Civil Appeals should not have rendered the judgment in this case if the evidence is such that a jury might fairly arrive at the conclusion that the plaintiff was not guilty of -contributory negligence by his act of running into the rear of the car of the Street Car Company. Stevens v. Masterson, 90 Texas, 417, 39 S. W., 292, 921; Warren v. Harrold, 92 Texas, 417, 49 S. W., 364.
This presents usually a difficult question for this court,. for it calls .upon the court to place itself in the attitude of the jury, to determine the weight of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, discarding all evidence to the contrary. If, therefore, fairly considering the evidence with a view of arriving at a just solution of the issue between the railway company and the plaintiff, the jury might have concluded that the plaintiff was not guilty of negligence which contributed to his injury, then we must reverse the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and remand the case for another trial.
In order to present this question, we will briefly state the points in the evidence of the plaintiff which tend to show the character of his act. In the first place, on the same track he had fallen in behind and followed for some distance, the car of the Interurban Company, into which he ran subsequently, and he saw that it had no light in the rear. There was no evidence that the interurban car was required to carry a light in the rear, but we will consider the question upon the assumption that it was the duty of that company to have provided rear lights for its cars under such circumstances. We will therefore assume that the motorman on the interurban car was guilty of negligence in failing to have a light on the rear of the car, with which the car, which the plain
It appears from the opinion of the court that there was a rule of the street car company for which the plaintiff operated its car, that no car should run at a higher rate of speed than three miles an hour in crossing a street. There was also a rule that when a car was standing on the opposite side of a street which was being approached, the car approaching should not cross, but should stop and wait until the standing car had crossed over.
The plaintiff’s evidence is to the effect that he was running at about twelve or thirteen miles per hour until he was within twenty feet of Swiss Avenue, and about three miles per hour when his ear crossed the Avenue. When the collision occurred the front of his car was crushed, which would justify the conclusion that Bogue was mistaken as to the speed at which the car was moving when the collision occurred. When the car was running three miles per hour it could not produce such result. But he says he saw the northbound inter urban car standing on the south side of Swiss Avenue, and the rule by which he should have been governed required that he should come to a stop, and remain until the inter urban car had passed. Bogue disobeyed that rule, and proceeded to cross the street, whereby he was injured.
The disregard of the requirements of that rule of his company was negligence as a matter of law, and the Ciourt of Civil Appeals correctly reversed the judgment of the trial court, and under the undisputed evidence properly rendered judgment for the street car company. It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be and it is hereby affirmed, and that the defendant in error recover of Bogue all costs in all courts.
Affirmed.
Opinion delivered February 17, 1915.
070rehearing
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
delivered the opinion of the court.
It was not the purpose of the court to announce in the opinion rendered by the late Chief Justice Brown on the original hearing of the case, that the violation by an employe of a rule of the master for the government of the particular employinent amounts, in itself, to negligence per se, as the counsel for the defendant in error seem to have understood; nor was it so stated in his opinion. It was only intended to declare,—and reading the statement of Judge Brown on the question in association with the rest of his opinion it is so revealed,-—-that under the state of the evidence and the circumstances shown by it the violation by Bogue of the rules referred to amounted to contributory negligence on his part as a matter of law, as held by the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals in its disposition of the case. We adhere to that view.
Bogue knew that the interurban car, into which he ran the car he was operating as a motorman, was proceeding just ahead of him on the same track in the same direction with his car, without, according to his testimony, any light on its rear end, because he saw it plainly. It was brilliantly lighted with electric lights on the inside. The collision occurred at the intersection of Swiss Avenue with Peak Street, along which the two cars were moving. An outgoing or northbound interurban car had approached Swiss Avenue from the south on a parallel track, and had stopped on its south side, with its headlight brilliantly burning. Bogue knew this when he approached Swiss Avenue from the north. Under rules of his own company which were binding upon him, it was required that under such conditions he stop, his car on the north side of the Avenue so as to permit the outgoing interurban car, which had ■first reached it, and therefore had the right of way to cross it, to pass over it before attempting to cross the Avenue with his car; and that in passing a car at a standstill on an opposite track the speed should in no event exceed three miles an hour, and the car be under absolute control so as to make possible an instant stop. Bogue did not stop his car on the north side of Swiss Avenue so as to permit the outgoing interurban car to cross over. Neither was the speed of his car reduced to three miles an hour as it approached and entered upon Swiss Avenue; nor was it under absolute control. Instead, he kept right on across Swiss Avenue without stopping; and, according to his own testimony, entered Swiss Avenue at a speed of six or seven miles an hour,—-at one place in his testimony it is stated as ten or twelve miles an hour, and.crashed into the rear of the interurban car ahead of him, which had stopped on the south side of the Avenue and which he must have known was just in front of him. He says he did not see the car just in front of him at' the immediate time because the brilliance of the headlight of the outgoing interurban car, then standing on the south side of Swiss Avenue, blinded him. He knew, however, that that light was shining in his face, and, if it did blind him, that it interfered with his vision; and with his knowledge that the other car was in front of him, that condition made it all the more .necessary, as an act of ordinary caution,. that he observe for his own safety both the rule requiring him to stop his car on the north side of Swiss Avenue, and to reduce its speed so as to put it in under absolute control, in any event.
It is the practice of this court to defer to the finding of a jury where the facts are in issue. But if under the circumstances shown in this case it may be held that Bogue, in disregard of rules framed for his own protection under such a condition as was presented at the time of this
The motion for rehearing has been carefully considered, and is overruled.
Opinion delivered June 26, 1915.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- E. L. Bogue v. Texas Traction Company
- Status
- Published