Armond v. T. & P. R. R. Co.

6 La. App. 280, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 429
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 1927
DocketNo. 2664
StatusPublished

This text of 6 La. App. 280 (Armond v. T. & P. R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armond v. T. & P. R. R. Co., 6 La. App. 280, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 429 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff’s mule was killed by one of defendant’s trains on August 30, 1925. This suit is to recover the value of the mule.

The District Court found that the animal was killed through the negligence of those in charge of the train, and gave plaintiff judgment for $200.00, the value of the mule, and costs. Defendant appealed.

OPINION

The killing of the mule by defendant’s train and its value as found by the District-Court are not disputed; but defendant contends that those in charge of its train at the time were guilty of no fault or negligence and that the railway company is therefore not liable.

The mule was killed at night and was found the next morning, its body lying on the dump about two or two and one-half feet from the track, according to the testimony of the section foreman.

This witness testified also that the dump at that place is about twelve feet wide on the top, that there is a space of about three and one-half feet on each side of the track, and that the dump is “somewhere about eight or nine feet, may be [281]*281more”, high, at the ¡place where the mule was killed.

Mr. Troup, the engineer in charge of the train at the time, testified that at the time he first saw the mule he had blown the whistle for the crossing, had shut off the steam, and his train was drifting”; that the mule was killed before he reached the crossing; that it was killed something like a half or three-fourths of a mile from the crossing; that he saw the mule after he blew for the crossing; that he went around a curve just before reaching the place where the mule w.as killed and could not see the animal until he got on straight track; and that when he reached straight track so that he- could see, the mule was about two or three poles away, possibly two poles. And he was asked by the court:

“How far did you tell counsel you were away before you saw the mule, didn’t you say three or four poles?”

And he answered:

“I answered, when I got around the straight track I was three or four poles from the bridge, and- the mule was pretty close to the bridge; I can’t tell you how close he was. I just got through whistling when the mule showed up, when I saw him.”

The undisputed testimony is that the' mule was killed thirty feet from the bridge. The telegraph poles are one hun-dred and seventy-six feet apart, so that the engineer, according to one part of his testimony, saw the mule when the train was at least two poles, or three hundred and fifty-two feet from it, and, according to other portions of his testimony, -he was at least three poles, or five hundred and twenty-eight feet, less thirty feet, or four hundred and ninety-eight feet from it.

He says, again, that - the curve is about fifteen car lengths from where the mule was killed and that a car is thirty feet long, which would (place the curve four hundred and fifty feet from where the mule was killed.

He says that when he first saw the mule it was about eight or ten feet, as near as he could tell, from the track, and he does not recall whether it was standing still or not.

W. E. Waite, the fireman, says the mule' was on his side of the track when he saw it; that he was then about three hundred yards from it; that the mule—

“was standing with his front feet off over on the edge of the embankment, with his tail toward the track, and after the engine, or while the engine was passing, he became frightened, and started back in the direction from which the train was coming, and ran, I would judge, twenty-five or thirty feet, wheeled and turned, following us in the direction ,we was going; in wheeling he stuck his head in between the baggage car and the first day coach, and when he did that the vestibule or some other part of the car struck him in the side, knocking or running him against the other mule which in turn knocked him down.”

He says the mule’ stood still until after the engine had passed him and that the engine, . coal car, baggage and mail car had passed him before he was hit.

Accepting the testimony of the section foreman, the engineer and the fireman, all called as witnésses by defendant, as 'true, we are of the opinion that the company, through 'its employees, was negligent.

[282]*282■As we have already noted, the railroad track at. the place : where the .animal was killed is on an embankment or dump some eight or nine feet high. Both the engineer and the fireman say that the mule, when he was first seen by them, was up on the embankment but not on the track. They both state that as best as they could see it was about eight feet from the track. But considering the undisputed testimony that the crown of the embankment is only twelve feet wide and that there is a space of' not more' than three and a half feet on each side of the track, we conclude that they are mistaken as to the distance the mule was from the rail.

The fireman says that the mule was standing with its front feet over the edge of the dump and with his' hind feet next to the rail. Its hind feet, therefore, must have been very near the rail, possibly at the end of the crossties.

•The nearness of- the animal to the track is also indicated by the testimony of the engineer ■ when- he says, in explanation as to how the mule got hurt, that the engine missed it; and by the testimony of the fireman, who says that when the engine passed the mule it became frightened and wheeled and ran back. ' He does not say that the mule ran uip on the embankment, but says that when it turned to run it stuck its head between two cars and was hit by the vestibule. It was, therefore, very close to the track all the time, and while never on the track it was 'in dangerous proximity thereto.

The mule was not merely on the company’s right of way; it was up on a high embankment, almost on the track. The animal was peen in tha¡t situation by. both the engineer and the fireman when the train was anywhere from three hundred and fifty to four hundred and fifty feét away, according to the engineer, and at approximately twice that distance, according to the testimony of the fireman.

Seeing the animal in dangerous proximity to the track, it was clearly the duty of those in charge of the train to take such precautions to avoid injuring it as were reasonable with due regard to the safety of the train and its passengers.

But the testimony shows that they did absolutely nothing to avoid injuring the animal. When the. animal was seen the engineer had already cut off the steam and the train was “drifting” and going at something like twenty-five miles an hour; it was then not making the usual noise. No stock alarm was sounded, the whistle was not blown (it was blown for the crossing, some distance away), the lights were not flashed on and off as is customary to frighten stock off the track; the air cocks were not open; ■ no noise whatever was made to frighten the animal off the track. ' So noiselessly did the train approach the ■ animal that it did • not become frightened until the engine passed it. The brakes were never applied and no effort at all made to slacken the speed of the train or stop it.

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6 La. App. 280, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armond-v-t-p-r-r-co-lactapp-1927.