Judges: Levy
Filed Date: 1/13/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
We are of the opinion that the appellant's motion for rehearing should be granted and its assignments of error numbers 14 and 23 should be sustained. The assignments present the question of negligence vel non of appellee in the facts of the case.
As stated in the main opinion, shortly before appellee came down the track to the point of injury some cars were run in on the siding, and the switch properly set to the siding, for the purpose of bringing out a train-load of meat from the packeries. An unexpected delay in icing the meat caused a delay of the train on the switch-track. The switch, as before stated, was properly set for the side-track, and was properly equipped with a switch-target, or signal, plainly visible and indicating the position of the switch and the track that it was set to at the time of the injury. No defective situation as to the switch, track or appliances in any manner appears or is relied on in the case. The switch and tracks were in the yard, or switching limits.
By this petition appellee claims that appellant, through its employes, negligently left the switch open to the main line and set to the sidetrack, and that such condition and position of the switch was unknown to him. The pleadings and evidence would not warrant the ruling that a switch temporarily and properly set to a siding constituted a defect as such in the road-bed or track. Pleasants v. Raleigh etc. Ry. Co.,
The question in the facts of the case pointedly arises, was the appellant guilty of negligence in leaving the switch set to the switch-track? Appellant had the legal right, and it was a proper exercise of such right, to use its switch-track in the proper way in conducting its necessary business inside its yard limits. The appellant had the right to direct the movements of its trains by signals alone, if the signals on same were adequate to give notice and warning and the signification known to the employes. Hannibal St. J. Ry. Co. v. Kanaley,
A finding by the jury that appellee was himself not guilty of negligence proximately causing the injury is contrary to the weight of, and is not warranted by the evidence. It is admitted by appellee that he did not keep a lookout for, or even look at all in the direction or towards the switch in front of him at any time in coming *Page 378 down the main line track towards the switch. It is admitted by him that "if I had looked at the switch-stand or target I could have seen it" by "a mere glance" or "just a flash of my eye." He further admits, "I could have seen it, I expect, 75 or 100 yards before I got to it. . . . That would have been in ample time to have stopped. . . . I could could have stopped in 30 feet." As before stated, he admits its signification and purpose, and admits that had he seen it he would have stopped the car. Appellee gives as his reasons for not looking at the switch or signal, that it was because he was intently watching a freight-train at the depot ahead of him, and because a negro man riding on the handcar was standing in front of him at the time and in the way of his looking, and because there were several bridges under the track to pass over and he did not want to get caught on them if the freight-train should move towards him. The switch-stand and signal were standing five feet to the right of the track, and appellee was riding on the right of the car approaching the switch, and the switch-stand stood about as high as a man's head, and there were no obstructions on the ground to appellee's view. None of the reasons given by him, in the record, would justify his failure to look towards the signal, as he had merely to move his head around the negro to see, by a mere glance or flash of the eye, the signal. He admits that the freight-train was standing still a quarter of a mile ahead of him. He says in respect thereto, "The train was standing still. . . . The switch was between me and the train I was looking at. . . . I suppose the train was about three or four hundred yards from the switch." It may be true that appellee did not know at the time how long the train might stand there, but it is true that at the moment it was standing still, and it is true that it did stand still till appellee reached the switch, and afterwards. In this state of facts, he could not claim that his mind was so perturbed by the appearance of danger to him as that he could not exercise care to attend to his duty to look for other dangers. Even if such appearance upset his calm thought and prudent action in other matters, still it appears, as admitted by him, that he had ample opportunity and time, before this time, to look at the derailment point for the switch. When lifting the handcar over the derailment there was no reason given or apparent in the record why appellee did not look, as at that time there was nothing to keep him from looking or to distract his attention. He admits that at the derailment point in the yard, and before he reached the switch, he could have seen the switch if he "had looked." It conclusively appears, therefore, that appellee had opportunity and time to see and look for the switch and its warning, and simply neglected to look, and could have seen by the simple act and exertion of looking, and have averted his injury, as he admits, by looking. He failed to do so and was injured, under the admitted facts. Could he reasonably predicate a recovery if his injury was due to his own want of care? We think not.
Because in the record there is a want of legal liability, the judgment, we think, should be reversed and here rendered for appellant with all costs.
Reversed and rendered. *Page 379
Writ of error granted. Judgment of Court of Civil Appeals was at first affirmed, but on motion for rehearing was reversed and the cause remanded. Anderson v. St. Louis S.W. Ry. Co. of Tex., 104 Texas.