Balloga v. Wyman

431 P.2d 866, 163 Colo. 558, 1967 Colo. LEXIS 925
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 25, 1967
Docket21430
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 431 P.2d 866 (Balloga v. Wyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balloga v. Wyman, 431 P.2d 866, 163 Colo. 558, 1967 Colo. LEXIS 925 (Colo. 1967).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Day.

The parties appeared in the trial court inverse to their position here on writ of error. Defendants were the fireman, engineer and the Missouri Pacific Railroad and will be referred to as the Railroad. Defendant in error, Phyllis L. Wyman, brought this action under the wrongful death statute as the sole surviving heir and widow of Leslie M. Wyman. He was the driver of a bulk milk tank truck which was owned by the Pueblo Dairy Exchange, Inc., another of the plaintiffs. Mrs. Wyman will be referred to as plaintiff, and the dairy company as Exchange. The deceased will be referred to as Wyman

The action arose out of a crossing-collision between one of the Railroad’s freight trains and an Exchange truck driven by Wyman. Trial was to a jury which found *560 the issues in favor of plaintiff and Exchange and awarded each of them damages. The Railroad brings the case here by writ of error.

Although the Railroad cites as error the court’s giving of some instructions and its refusal to give others, we will consider only one point urged for reversal. It is the Railroad’s contention that the record discloses evidence of negligence on the part of the deceased Wyman which was the sole and proximate cause of his injuries. In advancing this argument it is willing tO' concede, arguendo, that the question of its negligence may have properly been one for consideration of the jury; it asserts, however, that Wyman was contributorially negligent as a matter of law and that the court should have directed a verdict in favor of the Railroad.

The evidence concerning events before and at the moment of the collision consisted of the testimony of the engineer and fireman and of two persons giving negative testimony, i.e., one didn’t see the collision and one didn’t see or hear it. In addition physical evidence surrounding the site of the collision was presented to the jury by testimony and photographs. Together they present no disputed facts. Plaintiff contends, however, that inferences drawn from the facts could lead reasonable men to differ as to whether Wyman was contributorially negligent, and that it was not error for the court to refuse to direct a verdict for the Railroad.

The collision occurred on a clear day at approximately 3 P.M. Wyman was first observed by the train crew driving on a divided highway No. 96 in a westerly direction toward Pueblo. The railroad tracks also run east and west. The Railroad’s freight train, having a total of 70-odd cars, was also traveling in a westerly direction, heading into Pueblo. The extreme north and right-hand edge of highway 96, which is marked by wood barriers, is 131 feet from the south or the first of the two rails upon which the freight train was traveling. Immediately north of the highway is a 22 foot service or access road *561 which is separated from the main highway by the aforementioned barrier posts. From the extreme northerly or right-hand edge of the service road was an onion shed 67 feet north. It was 32 feet wide, measured from north to south. The onion shed was set back 71 feet from the center of a 22 foot wide loose dirt county road which traverses in a northerly direction leading from highway 96. The northern edge of the onion shed was 32 feet from the south or first of the two rails of the Railroad.

The fireman, Balloga, was acting as engineer and sitting at the controls on the right-hand side of the diesel cab. The only testimony as to the actions of Wyman was elicited from him and from the engineer, Lynch. Wyman made a right turn off highway 96 on to the county road and traveled in a northerly direction the aforementioned 131 feet to the point of impact. At the time he made his turn, the engineer and fireman, with minor variations as to their estimate of distance, testified that they were approximately a quarter of a mile east of the road crossing. They testified that they had passed the whistle post which is 1700 feet from the crossing and had given their first blast of the whistle at that point as required by regulations. Wyman disappeared behind the onion shed and then emerged therefrom again into the view of the Railroad crew when the train was approximately 500 feet from the crossing It was estimated that he was traveling approximately four or five miles an hour, and Balloga assumed he was going to stop. The train was traveling 50 miles an hour or approximately ten times as fast as Wyman and the Exchange truck. As Wyman was closing the 32 feet gap from the edge of the shed to the point of impact, both Balloga and Lynch stated that he did not look toward them, and Lynch began making short blasts on the whistle. The bell was also ringing and had been ringing for the distance of 1700 feet from the whistle post to the crossing. In addition, the headlight on the engine was burning. The emergency brakes on the train were *562 set immediately —150 feet — before the impact, and the train traveled 2376 feet before coming to a stop.

The testimony was that the allowable speed of the train was 55 miles per hour, and a passenger train going into Pueblo would have a maximum speed of 79 miles per hour at the same point.

The testimony from Balloga and Lynch was elicited by the right of cross-examination under the pertinent rule. Two other witnesses were called by the plaintiff. One testified that he was approximately 100 feet from the point of impact, but with his back turned to the train. His attention was attracted by the erratic blowing of the train whistle, but before he could turn around he heard the impact. Another witness was operating a “beet loading scoop” at the east edge of a beet pile 15 feet north of the Railroad’s tracks and 500 to 600 feet east of the county road. He testified that his machine was making such a noise that he heard neither the train whistle nor the sound of the impact. He also1 established that the pile of beets had a temperature a considerable number of degrees higher than the atmosphere of the air and caused the beets to emit a cloud of steam.

That Wyman drove on to the Railroad crossing at the point of impact, totally oblivious of the presence of -the freight train coming down the track at 50 miles per hour, is conceded. Both the fact that the train crew testified that he did not look in the direction of the railroad train or from the fact that he did not make any effort at any point to apply the brakes to the truck, make this apparent. Plaintiff argues that it was for the jury to determine whether Wyman was excused from his duty to look, listen and stop if need be before driving across the railroad track: (a) by the presence of the onion shed, which temporarily obstructed his view; (b) by the noise created where the beets were being loaded; and (c) by the presence of the cloud of steam through which the engine emerged. The density of the steam and whether it was blown in the direction of the *563 Railroad’s tracks is not established by any competent evidence.

We hold that there were no factors from which the jury could find and infer that Wyman was free from contributory negligence. His duty under the law is so plain as to admit of no excuse therefrom under the circumstances of this case. As this court stated in Union Pacific v. Cogburn, 136 Colo.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bassett v. O'DELL
491 P.2d 604 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1972)
Denver and Rio Grande Western R. Co. v. Lipscomb
437 P.2d 554 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
431 P.2d 866, 163 Colo. 558, 1967 Colo. LEXIS 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balloga-v-wyman-colo-1967.