El Paso & Southwestern Railroad v. Polk

This is a suit instituted by appellee to recover damages arising from personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted through the negligence of appellant. The cause was *Page 271 tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee for $4,000, of which amount $2,000 were remitted by appellee.

The injuries were inflicted through the negligence of appellant in running a locomotive into a car upon which appellee was riding, at a crossing between the railroad of appellant and the railroad of the Texas Pacific Railway Company. The collision did not occur through the contributory negligence of appellee. No signals were given by appellant of the approach of its engine, and it ran into the cars of the Texas Pacific Railway Company that were being pushed across the track, after it had stopped and the customary blasts of the whistle had been given. No attention was paid by the employes of appellant to the crossing, although they were close enough to have heard the signals. They knew the crossing was used day and night by the Galveston, Harrisburg San Antonio Railway Company, but never whistled nor stopped before passing the crossing. The employes could, on the night of the collision, see four or five car lengths and could have stopped in two car lengths. Three lights were on the top of the car that was struck. No effort was made by the employes of appellant to lessen the speed of the locomotive at or near the crossing.

It is not contended by appellant that any precautions were taken by it to prevent the collision, the position, seemingly, being that the employes of the train, on which appellee was riding, saw its locomotive at a distance of fifteen car lengths coming towards the crossing and should have anticipated that it would give no signals, and would run into the train on the crossing. Appellee was justified in acting on the theory that the employes of appellant would act with some regard for human life and property rights, and could presume that they would not recklessly run into a train on the crossing. Appellee, in discharge of his duties, as an employe of the Texas Pacific Railroad Company, had as much right on the crossing as appellant, and more, perhaps, because the train on which he was riding had the precedence by having first reached the crossing. We think this rule should prevail even though railroad companies had never promulgated any rule on the subject, for it is founded on the principles of common sense and a just recognition of the rights of others. A man of reasonable prudence was justified in presuming that the servants of a corporation would not deliberately trample upon and disregard such principles and would not recklessly drive a locomotive into cars moving over a crossing, no matter how much they had before that time disregarded the rules of safety in running trains across other railroads without giving any warning or signal, or coming to a stop in order to ascertain if another train was approaching.

The evidence discloses that the yard master and foreman was on the car with appellee and he was in charge of the train, and he gave the signal for it to be backed on the crossing. Appellee had no control over the movement of the train, and yet it is contended that his conduct in being on the car was so palpably negligent that the court should have instructed a verdict for appellant. We do not think so. Although the train was in a place where it was lawful *Page 272 and right for it to be, appellee was not responsible for its being there, and had not lost the protection of the law by staying at his post of duty until he saw that appellant's train would crash into the car. When he saw that he did all he could to escape from the car. The court did not err in refusing to instruct a verdict for appellant and the jury was justified in finding that the collision occurred through the negligence of appellant.

The second and third assignments of error complain of the admission in evidence of statements made by appellee to his physician as to pain in the back between the dorsal and lumbar vertebrae. The complaints were made after the suit was instituted, the last time being the week before the trial, but were made to appellee's physician when he had called at the office of the physician for examination and treatment, and he was under medical care at the time the statement was made. There is no evidence to the effect that the examination of appellee was made for the sole purpose of furnishing the physician with information on which to base an opinion favorable to appellee. In the case of Railway v. Johnson,95 Tex. 409, cited by appellant, the physician testified that the statements were made during an examination, which took place, not for treatment, but only to qualify the physician to testify as an expert at the trial, and while the court held that statements made under such circumstances were not admissible, it was further held that the objection that the evidence "would be self-serving, hearsay, immaterial and irrelevant," did not raise the point. The objections in this case are "that the time intervening between the accident and the occasion of the complaint was too remote; and that any statement that the plaintiff may have made at the time mentioned would be a mere self-serving declaration and the same was irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent." It follows that the point, as to the declarations being made during the course of an examination arranged for the purpose of making the declarations, is not raised in this case. Wheeler v. Tyler S.E. Ry., 91 Tex. 356.

In the Wheeler case, last cited, it was objected that the evidence was hearsay; but the court held that the objection was untenable, and in effect held that the only valid objection would have been that the declarations were made to order for the purposes of the trial. Nothing of the sort is revealed by the evidence in this case, and no such objection was interposed.

There is no force in the objection that the declarations were made too long after the accident. Time does not enter into the consideration of such testimony. As said in Texas Pac. Ry. v. Barron, 78 Tex. 421: "We think the evidence was properly admitted, and that the time that may have elapsed between the injury and the declaration is not of much importance in an inquiry of this character. The question was, What was his feeling at the time of speaking? Whether that was some time after the accident or not might effect the weight to be given to the evidence as tending to establish that he was injured in the wreck, but would not affect its admissibility." We conclude that, under the objections urged, the evidence was not improperly admitted. *Page 273

It was decided in the case of Houston T. C. Ry. v. Shafer,54 Tex. 641, that such evidence was not hearsay. "As respects the incident or circumstance of his suffering from the disease at the time referred to by the witness, it was a part of theres gestae; it was not the less admissible because it was not a part of the transaction which occasioned the injury to his person on the defendant's railway."

The fourth and fifth assignments of error advance the proposition that the verdict was contrary to the law as given by the court. That contention is disposed of by our conclusions of fact hereinbefore stated.

The court did not err, as claimed in the seventh assignment of error, in submitting the issue as to whether appellant's servants were guilty of negligence in failing to give signals or stop at the crossing. The negligence was made to hinge upon the facts and circumstances of the case, and although appellant's servants may have been in the habit of disregarding the plain dictates of prudence in passing crossings, it was a question of fact for the jury, as to whether their negligent customs gave them the right to run over anything that impeded their progress. It was also a question of fact to be determined by the jury as to whether appellee was in the exercise of care and prudence in remaining on the car as long as he did.

There is neither fundamental error or any other kind in the two charges criticized in the eighth, ninth and tenth assignments of error. There is no conflict, as claimed, between the main and supplemental charges. If there was a conflict it would not be fundamental error and could not be considered in the absence of assignments filed as required by law. Assuming in one charge that appellee saw the approaching locomotive and leaving it to be found as a fact by the jury in another would not be an error "either fundamental in character or one determining a question upon which the very right of the case depends." Wilson v. Johnson, 94 Tex. 272; Harris v. Petty,66 Tex. 814.

The verdict, as cut down by the remittitur, is not excessive.

Affirmed.

Writ of error refused.