Brooks v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.

75 So. 731, 141 La. 809, 1917 La. LEXIS 1569
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 16, 1917
DocketNo. 22203
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 So. 731 (Brooks v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Texas & P. Ry. Co., 75 So. 731, 141 La. 809, 1917 La. LEXIS 1569 (La. 1917).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, C. J.

This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment for $5,000 obtained by plaintiff, as the widow of Randolph (called “Curley”) Brooks, as damages for injury said to have been sustained by her in the killing of her husband through the alleged negligence of defendant, one of whose trains ran over him on the night of July 24-25, 1913.

It appears from the evidence that the decedent was employed and lived at Meeker, a flag station on defendant’s road about two miles east of Lecompte, and that on Saturday, July 24th, he went to Lecompte, and that night joined a party of men of his own (the negro) race and condition who had been gambling and drinking all that day at a barroom and gambling resort, and remained with them until midnight, when, the place being closed, he went to a restaurant at which he was stopping, and, after remaining there for a while, and possibly obtaining a meal, started to return home by way of the railroad track. I-Ie was accompanied in leaving the restaurant by the sister of the proprietor and her daughter, who lived at Lecompte and were returning to their domicile, and, having reached the railroad, where their ways parted, the elder woman invited plaintiff to spend the night at her house, an invitation which he declined, and when she last saw him he [811]*811was walking down the track in the direction of Meeker. She testifies that he appeared to have been drinking, but that he was in possession of his senses, and could walk and talk, and that he continued to talk, over his shoulder, as he walked down the track. It must then have been after 1 o’clock (in the morning of Sunday, July 25th), for it is shown that the train which next passed over the road was No. 52, and that it left Lecompte, going east at, say 1:32, and decedent’s body was found on the track later in the day, at a point about 3,750 feet east Of that station.

Among the men whom he had met at the barroom were Henry Scott, Maddox Brown, and “Slim” Johnson.' Scott says, in his testimony, “We alls was in the back room of the saloon drinking.” Being asked, “Were Slim and Maddox with you all day,” he replied “No, sir; but we was all right around there, right around the saloon there.” And, answering the question, “What time that day did you meet Curley Brooks, first,” he said “It was night; I suppose he come in after he got off from his work; it was night when he come into the saloon.” The three men named, in view of the closing of the saloon at midnight, had an understanding that they would take the train for Cheneyville, a regular passenger station seven miles east of Lecompte, where there was a working camp in which they were assured of finding further amusement, and they met at the depot about the time that train No. 52, going east, was due, and, when it went out, attempted to find places on the “blind baggage” car. They say, however, that Scott was unable to get on by reason of the fact that the place was crowded, and that he went forward to secure a position on the pilot of the engine, and he says that the position that he secured was astride of the drawhead, which he rode in that way to Cheneyville, where he continued his carouse during the rest of the night and until the next evening. He further testifies that there was no moon that night, and he was unable to remember whether or not it was cloudy; that he kept his head down and his hat pulled down, in order to keep the gnats and the wind out of his eyes, but that, notwithstanding those disadvantages and the further fact (to which he testifies) that there was a little curve in the track at that point, he looked forward as far as he could without raising his head, and was able to see an object lying upon the track at a distance of 450 or 600 feet, which, when the locomotive was about to strike it, he recognized to be Curley Brooks, and that, if his hat had not been pulled down he could have seen the object at a greater distance; “could have seen it a mile.”

He testifies that Brooks was lying “right-down next to the right-hand rail,” with his head to the east, his feet in the direction of the train, and his face toward the middle of the track, and that no part of him was lying across the track, diagonally or otherwise. He further says that he mentioned the occurrence to his companions, Maddox and Slim, when they. reached Cheneyville, and told them that it was Curley who had been run over, and they corroborate that testimony, but it is shown that they had previously stated to the claim agent of the defendant that he did not tell them that he knew who it was that had been run over. It is not pretended that either of them mentioned the subject to any of the railroad employes at Cheneyville, or that they participated in the identification of the remains on the following day, when at Lecompte the inquest was held, though there appears to have been some question about the identification, and Maddox and Slim, if not Scott, were in Lecompte at that time.

No member of the train crew heard anything or knew anything of the accident at the time, or heard of it for a month after-wards, and the engineer who was in charge [813]*813of the locomotive, having no specific recollection either of the usual incidents or of anything unusual, testified on that basis that nothing unusual occurred within his knowledge; that a strict lookout ahead was kept by him; that the train at the time of the accident was probably moving at the rate of 15 miles an hour; that at that speed it might have been stopped by the use of the emergency appliances within 100 feet; that the rays of the headlight strike the track about 75 feet in front of the locomotive; that on a clear night and straight track he could see an obstruction “like a man standing upright, or an animal, not lying down,” at a distance of a quarter of a mile; that in such case a man cannot be distinguished from a mule or cow at a distance of more than 100 or 200 feet; that a man lying down could not be distinguished from a pile of cinders (of which there are plenty on the road) unless the track is perfectly clean, “clean as white marble”; that, in riding astride of the drawhead, a person has about 8 inches of iron to sit on and would have to hold on (to the coupling lever) and have a very uncomfortable ride.

Seroggs, defendant’s section foreman, testifies that the track, which was ballasted with gravel, with a flat surface flush with the surface of the ties, had upon it a growth of grass to the height of the rails; that, as indicated to him, the decedent was lying upon the left side of the track. Dr. Henry, the coroner, also testifies that decedent’s body was found by him on the left side of the' track, though parts of the remains were scattered along further to the eastward; his testimony on that subject reading as follows:

“The trunk, that is, the body, was in the weeds on the left side of the track, and when we got to the body the buzzards had been there and they had eaten off his arm and a good portion of his viscera. There was an arm intact that I picked up down the track, but, of course, that was bruised, too, and part of the skin scratched off. Q. On which side of the track, Doctor, passing Cheneyville, was the body found? A. On the left side. Q. That would be on the fireman’s. side. A. Yes, sir; that is the body was found there.”

On cross-examination:

“Q. Doctor, starting from Lecompte and going towards Meeker, please state, as best you can recollect, where you found the diffei’ent parts of the remains, and what parts they were? A.

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Related

Edwards v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.
185 So. 111 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)
Tassin v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc.
139 So. 695 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
Gibson v. T. & P. Ry. Co.
121 So. 382 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 So. 731, 141 La. 809, 1917 La. LEXIS 1569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-texas-p-ry-co-la-1917.