Edwards v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.

185 So. 111
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 1938
DocketNo. 1909.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 So. 111 (Edwards v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.) 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
Edwards v. Texas & P. Ry. Co., 185 So. 111 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

*112 OTT, Judge.

The body of Austin Edwards, the twenty year old son of the plaintiffs, was found between the rails of the defendant railroad company’s track on the morning of October 19, 1937, a short distance above the station of Point Blue, in Evangeline Parish. The face and the upper part of the body were badly mashed and crushed, and the right arm was missing. This suit is by the parents of the deceased to recover damages for his death in the sum of ten thousand dollars.

The case is here on an appeal taken by the defendant from a judgment against it in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $3,000. The plaintiffs have answered the appeal and ask that the judgment be amended by increasing the amount of the award to the sum of $10,000.

The charge is made that the mixed freight and passenger train of the defendant railroad ran over and killed the deceased as the train was making its regular run from Eunice to Bunkie the night previous, and while the deceased was lying on the track unconscious from over indulgence in alcoholic liquors,' or as the result of an epileptic spell to which the deceased was at times subject. The operators of the train are charged with negligence in failing to keep a proper lookout, and in failing to see the deceased lying on the track in a helpless and unconscious condition, and in theit failure - to stop the train.

The railroad denies that it was guilty of any negligence, and denies that the deceased was run over and killed by its train while he was lying on its track. The pleadings and the evidence in the case have narrowed the issues down to one question of fact; i. e., whether or not the deceased was run over and killed by the train while lying in an ttnconscious condition between the rails.

It is shown that the train was going- only fifteen miles per hour and that the track is straight at the point where the body of the deceased was found; that there are ho obstructions on the track at that point to prevent the operators of the train from seeing an object as large as a human being on the track at night as far as 800 or 900 feet; that if the deceased was lying on the track, between the rails, he could have been seen in ample time to stop the train. It therefore follows that there is no question in this case of the inability of the engineer to stop the train after seeing the deceased on the track, but the question is, was the deceased lying on the track in an unconscious condition and was he run ovér by the train and killed while in that position? If this question is answered in the affirmative, the negligence of the defendant is practically admitted, or at least follows as the only reasonable conclusion.

No one actually saw this unfortunate young man lying on the track, nor did any one see the train run over him. The proof of the disputed fact insofar as plaintiffs are concerned must rest on circumstantial evidence, and established physical facts. A brief summary of the circumstances and the physical facts is necessary to a proper analysis and understanding of the evidence.

The deceased lived with his parents, colored tenants, a few hundred yards northwest of the station at Point Blue, on the .west side of the track. He had been away from.home for some two weeks’working in the rice fields of southwest Louisiana and was on his way home to spend the night with his parents. He and a companion, Ford Fontenot, alighted from a truck a short distance below the depot at Point Blue between 8 and 9 o’clock on the night before the dead body was found. The deceased had been drinking most of the afternoon, and he was considerably under the influence of liquor when he reached Point Blue, but he could walk and was able to talk coherently. His companion, Fontenot, asked the deceased to go home with him, but he refused and told Fontenot that he was going to the home of his parents. The deceased and Fontenot parted company while the deceased was walking on the railroad track toward his home, Fontenot turning off to the right in order to go to his home located some four or five hundred feet north of the depot on the east side of the railroad. The point where the two separated is not far from the place where the body of the young man was found the next morning.

A resident of Point Blue who lives some 75 feet west of the depot, and some 150 yards from the place where the deceased is supposed to have, been struck, testified that the deceased caüie to his home about nine o’clock that night asking if his parents still lived at the same place (it appearing that they were talking of moving to another place), and the witness told the deceased that his parents were still living' *113 at the same place, several hundred yards north of the 'station and on the west side of the railroad. The witness says that the deceased was noticeably under the influence of liquor. The deceased left the home of this witness walking up the railroad track toward the home of his parents, and the witness watched him until he went some two hundred feet up the track. This witness and Fontenot were the last to see the deceased alive.

The next morning the body of the young man was found lying between the rails of the track some 300 yards north of the station. About 100 yards north of the depot there is a switch track, known as the gin switch, and at a point near this gin switch, between the rails on the main track, a bundle of clothes, a hat and a piece of cocoanut were found. The bundle of clothes and the hat were shown to have been in possession of the deceased when he was last seen. The clothes were in a flour sack, and, according to the testimony, the bundle was some 10 or 12 inches high when lying on the ground. Neither the bundle nor the hat appeared to have been struck or mashed by the train. The body was found about 185 yards further north from the place where these articles were found. A piece of cocoanut was found near the hat and the bundle.

At the point where the clothes, hat and piece of cocoanut were found there is little dirt between the rails on top of the cross-ties, but a few steps further north the ties are fairly well covered with dirt forming a kind of crown in the center midway between the rails and tapering off on both sides down to the rails, so that there is very little dirt on the ties near the rails. At the point where this crown or rise begins there were dents or broken places in the dirt toward the left rail, and these signs continued at intervals up to the place where the body was lying. Some of the witnesses describe these dents as having the appearance of the print of a heel in the dirt. The body was lying near the left rail between the rails where these dents in the dirt stopped. The body was lying parallel with the track, the head toward the north and the face up. There was considerable blood oft the track near the body, and some of the witnesses state that there were signs of blood back to the switch, but there is a conflict in the testimony on this point.

The clothes worn by the deceased were badly torn and cut up, so much so that some of the witnesses said the deceased had been dragged. There were also pieces of cocoanut near the body and also broken pieces in the pocket of the clothes worn by the deceased. The face and chest of the deceased were crushed and mashed almost to a pulp, and the right arm was entirely off and was not found.

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-texas-p-ry-co-lactapp-1938.