Baltimore & O. R. Co. v. Joseph

112 F.2d 518, 18 Ohio Op. 151, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4337
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1940
DocketNos. 8148, 8149
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 112 F.2d 518 (Baltimore & O. R. Co. v. Joseph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & O. R. Co. v. Joseph, 112 F.2d 518, 18 Ohio Op. 151, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4337 (6th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

ARANT, Circuit Judge.

These appeals are from judgments in suits to recover for the wrongful death of Wilma Winland and for personal injuries and other damages sustained by Thomas Winland. The suits arose out of the same accident, were tried together in the District Court and argued together here.

On Sunday, February 7, 1937, Winland and his wife, Wilma, took his tools to the Stanley Mine, in Belmont County, Ohio, where he was to begin work as a coal miner the following morning. On their return, while crossing appellant’s railroad tracks, the 1930 Chevrolet Sedan in which they were travelling was struck by appellant’s train. Mrs. Winland was killed and Winland suffered personal injuries and damages to his car.

The only road from the mine to the main highway is a somewhat tortuous and hilly one. Bearing generally southwest, it crosses appellant’s tracks, which run in a southeasterly and northwesterly direction, at a 60° angle. As it nears the scene of the accident it is lower than the tracks, but for a distance of thirty feet adjacent thereto is on the same level. The traveler’s view to the west is obstructed by a wooded embankment on his right until he is near the tracks. Appellant introduced evidence to show that a pedestrian standing in the road fifteen feet from the tracks could see a man six feet tall walking westerly on the eastbound track until he had gone 496 feet from the intersection; at a distance of ten feet, he could see him 521 feet from the crossing, and from the first, or westbound, track, he could see him 561 feet away. Winland, who was driving, testified that he stopped his car five or six feet from the first, or westbound, track; that both he and his wife looked each way and listened; that neither saw or heard the train; that he put his car in low gear and crossed the first track, looking to the east, or his left, as he did so; that, as he started to cross the second, or eastbound, track, he looked again to the west, or to his right, and for the first time saw the train; that it was approaching at about forty-five miles an hour, but that he could not tell how far away it then was; that his car was moving about five miles an hour; that the collision occurred about two seconds after he started his car and about two feet from the point at which he first observed the train; and that he could have stopped his car within a foot at the rate of speed he was going. Appellant’s engineer, fireman and brakeman contradict Winland’s testimony, which was corroborated by three nearby residents, that the train’s whistle was not blown immediately before the accident. [520]*520The crew does not claim, however, that the whistle was blown at a distance greater than 1,200 feet from the crossing, or that the bell, was rung, at all; hence, it must be assumed that appellant violated Ohio General Code, § 8853,1 and was thereby guilty of negligence per se.

The train involved in the accident consisted of an engine, one hundred empty freight cars and a caboose. Appellant’s uncontradicted expert testimony shows that air brakes become operative upon a locomotive about three seconds after they are applied, and upon the rest of the train at the rate of about ten cars per second; and that a train of this size, travelling at the rate of twenty miles per hour, cannot be stopped in less than five to six hundred feet after the brakes become operative over the whole train.

The brakeman testified that he was on the brakeman’s seat on the left side of the engine,. looking ahead as the train approached the crossing; that he saw the Winland car, then moving about ten miles an hour, when it was about fifteen feet from the first, or westbound, track, the engine then being about 400 feet from the crossing; that, when the car was about five and the engine about 300 feet from the crossing, he, realizing the car was not going to stop, shouted to the engineer to stop, and immediately heard the air brakes being applied; that he felt the train begin to slow down about the time the engine hit appellee’s car, which had pulled onto the eastbound track and stopped. The members of the crew testified that the train’s speed, prior to the application of the brakes, was approximately twenty miles per hour, and this testimony is contradicted only by Winland’s estimate. It is undisputed that the engine stopped less than 500 feet from the crossing.

Appellant’s motions for a directed verdict, upon appellees’ opening statement, at the close of their evidence and at the close of all the evidence, were overruled, and both cases were submitted to the jury upon a charge that embodied the last clear chance doctrine.

The testimony of Winland that he stopped his car before he started across the tracks and was travelling not faster than five miles an hour as he approached the track on which his car was hit was uncorroborated and contradicted. Taking the view of the evidence most favorable to Winland, we are nevertheless of the opinion that it was error to submit his case to the jury. The physical facts were such that, had he looked and listened with reasonable care, after stopping his car and before attempting to cross the tracks, as he testified and as the law required, he could not possibly have failed to see or hear the approaching train. He testified that about two seconds elapsed between the time he started to cross the tracks and the time he was struck. His estimate that the train was travelling forty-five miles per hour was made at a point almost directly in front of the engine and in the interval required for his car to travel two feet at a speed of five miles an hour, — circumstances scarcely favorable to the formation of an accurate judgment. If the speed of the train was forty-five miles per hour, however, it would have taken eight or nine seconds for the engine to travel the 521 to 561 feet of distance visible from the point at which Winland testifies he stopped his car; and it would have taken more than twice that time if the train was travelling twenty miles an hour as estimated by its crew, and as corroborated by the distance within which the train was stopped after the brakes were applied.

Winland’s case should not have been submitted to the jury if the evidence most favorable to him, considered in the light of the established physical facts, shows that the accident could not have happened had he used reasonable care for his own safety. That he was obliged to exercise such care cannot be questioned. He testified that he stopped, listened and looked [521]*521in each direction before starting across the tracks, but we are of the opinion that if he did this he did not necessarily satisfy the requirement of reasonable care. If he had looked to the west after starting to cross the first track and before reaching a position of peril in relation to the second, or eastbound, track, we think no one would regard him as having exercised more than reasonable care. According to his own estimate of the train’s speed and the length of time his machine was in motion, the train must have been in plain view and less than 132 feet from the crossing when he started across.

However, whether the ■ exercise of reasonable care, required Winland to look to the west any time after starting, it is clear that he should have done so when he started his car. At that time, he had an unobstructed view of the track for a distance of between 521 and 561 feet in the direction from which the train was approaching.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F.2d 518, 18 Ohio Op. 151, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-o-r-co-v-joseph-ca6-1940.