Court Opinion

ID: 3927217
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:53:11.833229+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:17:17.500263
License: Public Domain

Henry Pollock was a member of a section gang who were employed in repairing the roadbed of the Houston  Texas Central Railroad Company under the management of Kidd as foreman. On the day of the accident the gang were engaged in raising a dump upon the railroad track. A train was seen approaching from the south and Kidd told the men to keep working and he would call them off before the train reached them and in time for them to assume a safe position. When the train approached within forty-five to seventy-five yards of where the men were at work, they were called off and Pollock left the track and had got four or five feet from it, when a piece of coal, or cinder, or some such hard substance struck him in the eye. He did not get further away because he says he did not have time. One witness testified that he thought the train was running thirty-five to forty miles on hour. Other witnesses said it was running "pretty fast." The substance that struck the plaintiff in the eye seemed hot and some days after the accident was taken out by a physician; but the eye was ulcerated and the sight lost. The evidence for plaintiff tended to show that it was customary when the section gang were at work on the track and a train approached, for the foreman to give orders for them to keep at work, and he would notify them when to clear the track.
We were inclined to think that the occurrence was so unusual that it could not be said that the foreman ought to have anticipated it and that therefore he was not negligent. But upon examining the testimony we find that Kidd, the foreman, testified: "There is more danger in standing right close to a rapidly moving train than farther away. A swinging door or something falling down on you. I do not think there is more danger from escaping steam. I don't think that could bother a person five or six feet away. It is a fact that there are various dangers in standing in four or five feet of a train than there is in standing farther away." The plaintiff testified: "There is more danger in being three or four feet of a moving train than there is in being ten or fifteen feet away." T.W. Burke testified: "The custom was for the foreman to halloa the men off in plenty of time to get away from the track a sufficient distance to be entirely safe. As to what will constitute a reasonable distance I would think that something like fifteen or twenty feet would be a reasonable distance." J.S. Martin swore that "there was a custom in January, 1907, on the defendant's section where plaintiff was hurt in regard to the foreman halloaing the men off in time to enable them to get a reasonable distance from the passing train. The custom was to halloa us off in time to get far enough away to be out of danger. I think a reasonable distance would be something like twenty or *Page 72 
twenty-five feet away from the track." It would seem from the evidence that Kidd might reasonably have anticipated danger from leaving the men too near the passing train, but also that he did in fact anticipate it. There was ample evidence to warrant the jury in finding that the time allowed the men for leaving the track by Kidd was too short for them to do so in safety.
We do not concur with the Court of Civil Appeals in holding that the evidence undisputably shows that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The plaintiff testified, as we have seen, that he did not get further away because the time was too short for him to do so and that he left the track hurriedly. The testimony of other witnesses confirm this view. We do not think that this testimony can be broken down and disregarded by a mathematical calculation. If the data upon which the calculation is based are certain then the result of the calculation may be relied upon as being absolutely certain, but if the data be doubtful, then the result is necessarily doubtful.
The Court of Civil Appeals have jurisdiction to determine the facts; and because they have held that there was no sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict, we must presume, that they would have held that the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence and therefore the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.