Davis v. Canadian National Railway

124 So. 3d 585, 13 La.App. 5 Cir. 198, 2013 WL 5849896, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2189
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 2013
DocketNo. 13-CA-198
StatusPublished

This text of 124 So. 3d 585 (Davis v. Canadian National Railway) 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
Davis v. Canadian National Railway, 124 So. 3d 585, 13 La.App. 5 Cir. 198, 2013 WL 5849896, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2189 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SUSAN M. CHEHARDY, Chief Judge.

12This suit involves a railroad grade crossing accident in which a pedestrian was killed. The plaintiff appeals a judgment that granted motions for summary judgment in favor of two defendants. We reverse and remand.

FACTS

On July 25, 2009, Cynthia Tuckson, who was deaf, was killed by a train while walking across the railroad tracks at Taylor Street in Kenner. Her son, Donald Davis, filed suit against Illinois Central Railroad Company (IC), the City of Kenner, and others.1 The plaintiffs contentions are that the Taylor Street crossing was unreasonably dangerous and that the defendants should have installed an active warning [587]*587system in 2009.2

IC and Kenner filed motions for summary judgment.

The following facts were uncontested: At approximately 7:20 p.m. Ms. Tuckson, who was walking north on Taylor Street, attempted to cross the tracks without first looking to see whether there was rail traffic approaching. It was daylight. She was struck and killed by an oncoming train that was moving at ^approximately 26 miles per hour, sounding its horn, and ringing its bell. The traffic control devices in place for roadway traffic using the Taylor Street crossing were post-mounted cross buck signs. The train had its headlights on at high-beam and its auxiliary lamps were lit. The engineer began applying the emergency brakes when the front end of the train was approximately 130 feet from the western edge of Taylor Street, or more than three seconds before the fatal impact occurred, while Ms. Tuck-son was alongside the cross buck sign in the southeast quadrant of the crossing, 15 feet or more from the closest rail of the southernmost track. It took 25 to 26 seconds for the train to come to a complete stop, during which time the train traveled 600 feet. Ms. Tuckson lived in the vicinity of the railroad crossing and was familiar with the Taylor Street crossing, having traversed it many times prior to the accident. Ms. Tuckson was deaf, but she did not suffer from any vision handicap. If she had stopped at the cross buck sign and looked both ways for approaching rail traffic, she could have seen the oncoming train before she walked up on to the tracks in front of the train.

IC provided video footage of the accident itself. The train’s locomotive was equipped with a dash-mounted, forward-focused video camera that captured in real time the events leading to the accident. As the train approached Taylor Street, the video footage shows Ms. Tuckson was walking steadily toward the tracks, gazing straight ahead without looking to either side. The video has an audio track, so the viewer can hear the train’s horn sounding and its.bell ringing continuously, and the sound of the air brakes as they were applied. The video shows that the train arrived at the Taylor Street crossing just as Ms. Tuckson was stepping onto the first track. Due to the height of the locomotive cab in which the camera was placed, the video does not show Ms. Tuckson as the train struck her. The train locomotive came' to a full halt at the next street crossing beyond Taylor Street.

|4The plaintiffs expert in accident reconstruction, James R. Loumiet, found that the actions of the train crew in handling the train — horn, speed, braking — were reasonable and proper under the circumstances and that there was nothing the crew could have done under those circumstances to avoid the accident. However, Loumiet opined that the Taylor Street crossing was extra-hazardous and in need of an active warning system due to. sight distance restrictions, parallel roads, multiple railroad tracks, the raised hump where Taylor Street intersects with the tracks, high train volume, school buses and large trucks using the crossing, the collision record, and lack of active warning devices.

In opposition to the motions for summary judgment, the plaintiff presented an affidavit by Roger P. Perkins, Sr., dated August 26, 2011. In it Mr. Perkins made the following statements: He owns Perkins Restaurant & Sports Club located at 500 Taylor Street in Kenner; he has been president of Concerned Citizens Civic Co[588]*588alition for approximately 15 years; he has known Cynthia Tuckson for 20 years, and he knew she was deaf. On the date of Ms. Tuckson’s accident, there were two parties going on at the Rose Minor Park, which faces Taylor Street and is next to the railroad crossing at Taylor Street. In 2009, there were three local streets, including Taylor Street, Jackson Street- and Webster Street, that did not have active warning signs or crossing gates on them. “All these streets are in a predominately African American and low income community.” In the years prior to July 25, 2009, there have been people injured and killed at the Taylor Street, Jackson Street, and Webster Street [crossings]. On several occasions prior to July 25, 2009, he spoke with the Kenner city councilman who represented the district about the need to install crossing gates and blinking signals for the Taylor Street, Jackson Street, and Webster Street crossings. “Kenner Public Works, City of Kenner Department of Parks and Recreation, Kenner Code Enforcement, and |fithe Kenner Police Department travel these streets all the time and should have been aware that there were no active warnings of the crossing nor did they have crossing gates.” “A cduple of months ago, active barricades with flashing lights and crossing arms were installed on Taylor Street and Webster Street crossings.”

The plaintiff listed the following in his Statement of Contested Facts: (1) IC and Kenner knew of the accident history of the Taylor Street crossing; (2) IC and Kenner knew that two mainline tracks warranted active warning devices; (3) the area of Taylor Street between the railroad right-of-way was controlled by Kenner or the railroad; (4) sight-restricting vegetation was in the railroad’s right-of-way; (5) the Taylor Street crossing should have had active warning devices before Ms. Tuck-son’s July 25, 2009 accident; (6) there were multiple causes of the July 25, 2009 accident; (7) IC and Kenner knew that the Taylor Street crossing was unreasonably dangerous; (8) the conduct of IC and Ken-ner was a cause-in-fact of the resulting harm; and (9) Cynthia Tuckson looked to her left before she began her walk towards the Taylor Street crossing.

In reply to the opposition, IC objected to the Perkins affidavit, arguing various statements by Mr. Perkins are inadmissible because the plaintiff laid no predicate and the affiant established no personal knowledge for his assertions. The challenged statements include that there were two parties going on at Rose Minor Park on the day of Ms. Tuckson’s accident; that people have been injured or killed at the crossings at Taylor Street and two other streets; that he discussed the “need to install crossing gates and blinking signals” with the then-councilman for the district; that various Kenner department employees were on “these streets all the time.”

IC also objected in its reply memorandum to some statements by James Loum-iet. Specifically, IC challenged Loumiet’s statement that he observed and |fimeasured “sight-obstructing vegetation within IC’s right-of-way when he inspected the accident location on May 8, 2012.” IC pointed out that Loumiet does not describe the precise location of the vegetation in relation to Taylor Street, although he claims that the vegetation obstructed Cynthia Tuckson’s view of the oncoming train that ultimately struck her.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 3d 585, 13 La.App. 5 Cir. 198, 2013 WL 5849896, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 2189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-canadian-national-railway-lactapp-2013.