Colorado & Southern Railway Co. v. Duffy Storage & Moving Co.

361 P.2d 144, 145 Colo. 344, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 668
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 30, 1961
Docket19077
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 361 P.2d 144 (Colorado & Southern Railway Co. v. Duffy Storage & Moving Co.) 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
Colorado & Southern Railway Co. v. Duffy Storage & Moving Co., 361 P.2d 144, 145 Colo. 344, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 668 (Colo. 1961).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sutton

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*346 The parties appear here in reverse order of their appearance in the trial court. They will be referred to as they there appeared or by name when appropriate.

Plaintiff brought an action for damages to its truck, trailer, and crane resulting from the alleged negligent failure of the defendants to stop their train in time to avoid a crossing accident in Douglas County, Colorado, on the main line route between Denver and Pueblo on December 3, 1957. By their answers, defendants denied negligence and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. Defendant Colorado and Southern filed a counterclaim against plaintiff for damage to its property resulting from the alleged negligence of plaintiff’s agents in allowing its vehicle to become stalled on the railroad tracks. Plaintiff then interposed the defense of last clear chance to defendants’ charge of contributory negligence.

From a judgment in the amount of $33,199.00 based on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff, defendants prosecute this writ of error, contending that there was no negligence on their part, and, in any event, that the issues were not properly submitted to the jury by the instructions of the trial judge.

The crossing in question is approached from the north by a train on a wide flat curve on a slight grade. A whistle post was 1438 feet north of the crossing. The trains of defendants run in a southerly direction on the single track right-of-way involved here. There, was a dispute as to whether the engineer’s vision across the curve was unduly blocked by the almost flat field.

J. C. McIntosh, engineer on the train, had worked for defendant Colorado and Southern since 1915, and had served as locomotive engineer on this train, the Texas Zephyr, since 1952. According to his testimony, he was about 1500 feet from the crossing, near the whistle post, when he first saw an object at the crossing. He testified that he could not tell whether it was on the crossing or moving across it. When he was about 1000 feet from the *347 crossing he saw someone running down the track waving his hands. It was at that point McIntosh first applied the brakes. According to his testimony, when first he could see an object and that it was on the crossing, was when he was within 1000 or 1100 feet. He testified that as he approached the whistle post, he was not looking at the crossing, but at the track in front of him. And, it was not until he reached the whistle post that he looked ahead to the crossing.

The issues were submitted to the jury under what might be termed standard instructions on negligence and last clear chance. Defendants objected to the refusal of the trial judge to instruct the jury that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence as a matter of law by virtue of its violation of C.R.S. ’53, 13-4-69, which provides that no person shall move this type of heavy equipment over a railroad crossing, without first giving notice thereof to the railroad.

Conceding without deciding that violation of the statute involved here would be negligence per se, nevertheless violation of a statute which would otherwise preclude a party from recovering is not conclusive if the doctrine of last clear chance is applicable, for in that case violation of the statute is not the proximate cause of the accident and a negligent plaintiff may yet recover.

Under the doctrine of last clear chance, as expressed by this court in Lambrecht v. Archibald (1949), 119 Colo. 356, 203 P. (2d) 897, at page 365, it was held that “A negligent plaintiff who has placed himself in a perilous position from which he cannot extricate himself in time to avoid an accident, may recover from a negligent defendant who is aware of plaintiff’s perilous position or who, by the exercise of reasonable care, caution and vigilance, might have become aware of it, and thereafter, by the exercise of reasonable care and caution, could have averted the accident, but failed to do *348 so.” In accord: Restatement Law of Torts, Sec. 479, Ch. 17.

Assuming in the case before us that plaintiff was negligent, the question under last clear chance is whether defendants were aware of plaintiff’s peril, or should have been so aware, and by the exercise of reasonable care had a last clear chance to avoid the accident. If there is evidence to sustain such a finding by the jury, and no other matter amounting to reversible error appear in the case, we must affirm the judgment. Thus this plaintiff’s negligence does not necessarily bar him from recovery. A statement in Rosa v. Union Pacific Railroad Company (1952), 127 Colo. 1, 252 P. (2d) 825, 826, is appropriate here. It reads:

“Counsel for defendants urge that since plaintiff’s negligence was a continuing one up to the point of the collision, there was no chance for defendants to determine that plaintiff was in a position of peril, therefore the doctrine of last clear chance did not apply. As indicated above, we are not in harmony with that contention.”

The facts in the present case are somewhat similar to those in Union Pacific Railroad Company v. Ward (1956), 230 F. (2d) 287 (10th Circ. Ct. of App.). That case arose out of a collision in Colorado between a train and a tractor and tank trailer which had stalled on a crossing. There the driver of the tractor with its trailer was guilty of negligence per se in violating a different statute (C.R.S. ’53, 13-4-86). The engineer of the train testified that he observed Ward’s vehicle 2000 feet from the crossing, but thought it had stopped on the side of the crossing and was waiting for the train to pass. He further testified that if the emergency brakes liad been applied at that point, when he first saw the vehicle, the train could have been safely stopped before reaching the crossing, but that it was only after the train was 1000 feet from the crossing that he realized that the vehicle was on the tracks, and that the train could not be stopped *349 in that distance. The trial court instructed the jury that if a reasonably prudent person would have ascertained that the truck was astride the tracks when he first saw it, the failure to do so and to act accordingly, constituted negligence. “For,” said the court, “to look without reasonable care and without seeing what would be plainly visible to any reasonably prudent man under these circumstances, would be the same as not looking.” To the same effect is the decision in Fabling v. Jones (1941), 108 Colo. 144, 114 P. (2d) 1100.

In sustaining the judgment for plaintiff in the Ward case, the Court of Appeals said at page 290 of its opinion:

“After viewing the scene of the accident and hearing the evidence, the jury has said that a reasonably prudent person in the same circumstances would have ascertained that the standing truck was perilously astride the track and not safely standing to one side. And while it may tax our credulity, we are unable to say as a matter of law that the twelve jurors were clearly wrong; and that the peril was not discoverable to a reasonably prudent person exercising ordinary care in the circumstances.”

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361 P.2d 144, 145 Colo. 344, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-southern-railway-co-v-duffy-storage-moving-co-colo-1961.