Dickinson v. Granbery

1918 OK 494, 174 P. 776, 71 Okla. 9, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 843
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 27, 1918
Docket9150
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1918 OK 494 (Dickinson v. Granbery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. Granbery, 1918 OK 494, 174 P. 776, 71 Okla. 9, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 843 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

RAINEY, J.

This was an action against the receiver of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company by Lula May Granbery, the personal representative of Watt O. Granbery, an employe of the company, to recover damages for th^ death of the said Granibery resulting from a collision of a locomotive engine drawing a passenger train between Dalhart, Tex., and Liberal, Kan., and a motorcar on which deceased and a section crew, in his charge as foreman, were riding immediately preceding the accident. The collision occurred in Oklahoma, about 3% miles west of thej town of Good-well, about 200 yards east of the intersection of a public highway and the railroad company’s track. The company was engaged in interstate commerce, and the deceased was a section foreman for said company on the section of the road where he was injured, and at the time of his injury was engaged in his duties as such.

It is agreed by the plaintiff and defendant that the case is therefore governed by the federal Employers’ Liability Act. Pederson v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R. Co., 229 U. g. 146, 33 Sup. Ct. 648, 57 L. Ed. 1125, Ann. Cas. 19140, 153.

The cause was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $8,750, from which judgment the defendant has appealed to this court.

The circumstances of the collision, as shown by the evidence, were substantially as follows: The defendant railroad company’s track from Texhoma, Okla., to Liberal, Kan., was a long straight piece of track, and the ¡schedule time of the passenger train was about 35 miles per hour, including stops. When running on schedule time the train that struck the motorcar was due in Good-well, Okla., at 8:30 o’clock a. m., but on the morning of the accident it was about 20 or 25 minutes late. According to all the witnesses, thejre was a very dense unusually heavy fog enveloping the track at the time of the collision. As the foggy condition will have an important bearing on the case, we briefly quote from the testimony of some of the witnesses for plaintiff and defendant on this point.

Plaintiff’s witnesses:

Sport Hayes: “It was the foggiest morning that I evejr saw. The fog was so dense that you could not see a man 150 yards.”

D. B. Hayes: “There was a dense fog, and you could not see a man only a short distance away.”

George L. Ayeock, formerly State Senator: «* * * it was rather foggy that morning.

*11 * * * Slm wasn>t shining.”

H. E. Morrell: “It was a very heavy fog when we was out when the accident occur' red.”

Defendant’s witnesses:

T. J. Bickall, conductor of the train: “It was very foggy; a very foggy morning in spots.”

D. A. (Robertson, engineer: “* * * It was quite foggy out of Dalhart to Stevens; that is a station west of Tejxhoma. * * * The fog lay kind’a hazy and kind’a in little streaks. * * * When we left Texhoma the conditions of the fog was slightly clearing away. It was almost practically clear on leaving Tex-homa, but when we got down into the swell and sags between Texhoma and Goodwell occasionally there would be a little bank of fog — a bank or streak that was sagging down pretty close to the ground. When we came over near the place of the accident, a quarter of a mile before that, before we struck the handcar, or motorcar, rather, there was quite a fog bank, the heaviest of any that we found between Texhoma and Goodwell, yet I could see ovejr the bank. It was perfectly daylight, but it was lying down on the ground. * * * When I saw the motorcar I was right in the midst of this dense fog bank. I don't think k could see them over two hundred feet, or somewhere in that neighborhood. * * *”

D. H. Neeley; “The weather was very foggy; the fog was very dense.”

J. E. Shelladay, fireman: “We left Tex-homa about twenty-two minutes late on our schedule, probably twenty-five and we wejre running about 4b miles per hour, and it had been very foggy that morning. If I remember right, the engineer had turned the headlight off at Stevens — I don’t just recollect. I was busy a good deal of the time, but when we left Texhoma it was pretty clear, practically clear, but when we broke over a hill and entered a low place with a swag we struck heavy hanks of fog. * * * ”

The deceased, as was his custom, was at the station at Goodwell, with his section crew, on the morning of the accident at about 7 o’clock for the purpose of starting out for the day’s work. He was there informed by the station agent that the train was late. After he had left he went back again for the purpose of writing a letter, and then left the second time, going west in the direction from which the passenger train was coming. He warned his crew to look out for the approaching train, and was proceeding very slowly — about two or three miles an hour — and would slow down at short intervals, and he and his men would listen for the expected train. None of the section crew heard or saw the passenger train until it was almost upon them and the deceased was the first one who observed it. In the crew there were two Mexicans and two white laborers besides the deceased. He and one Mexican attempted to get the car off the track, and had succeeded in getting it turned sideways and halfway off when the motorcar was struck. This Mexican was in the middle of the track at one end of the car, and the deceased was at the other end. The impact killed the Mexican immediately and severely injured the deceased, from which injuries he' died three days thereafter.

The plaintiff claims that, under the unusual and extraordinary conditions surrounding the collision due to the very dense and unprecedented fog, it was incumbent upon the railroad company to use ordinary care and caution to warn any section men who might be working on or about the track of the approach of the train, and that, in the light of the attendant dangerous conditions, the defendant was negligent in running its train at an excessive speed, in failing to have a headlight burning on said train, and in failing to ring the bell or sound the whistle in running through the fog, and that its failure to take all or any of said precautions was the proximate caus^ of plaintiff’s injuries. The principal contention of counsel for defendant is that the plaintiff has utterly failed to show that the defendant company was guilty of any negligence. Theroj was a sharp conflict in the testimony as to whether the bell was rung or the whistle sounded for the road crossing about 200 yards west of the place wherej the collision occurred. But it is admitted by counsel for the railroad company that this conflict took this question to the jury, and that the general verdict returned by the jury is conclusive for the purposes of this case, that these alarms were not given. In fact, this is the weight of the testimony. It is not claimed on the part of the railroad company that the whistle was sounded or the bell rung at any other point in approaching the place! of collision and in going through the fog at this place. The evidence also discloses that while the headlight was burned on this morning on account of the foggy conditions probably as far as Stevens, that it had been turnejd off and was not burning just preceding or at the time of the collision. It is also clear from the evidence that the passenger train was going at a rate of speed of not less than 36 miles per hour and probably 45 miles pey hour. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 494, 174 P. 776, 71 Okla. 9, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-granbery-okla-1918.