Evans v. Blytheville, Leachville & Arkansas Southern Railroad

227 S.W. 257, 147 Ark. 28, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 10, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 257 (Evans v. Blytheville, Leachville & Arkansas Southern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Blytheville, Leachville & Arkansas Southern Railroad, 227 S.W. 257, 147 Ark. 28, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 134 (Ark. 1921).

Opinions

Smith, J.

Appellant is the widow and administratrix of John Evans, who was killed November 4, 1917, while employed by appellee railroad company,, and she sues to recover damages for his death. There was a trial before a jury, which terminated in a verdict for the railroad company under the direction of the court.

It is insisted for appellee that the killing was caused solely and entirely by the negligence of Evans; that a proper lookout was being kept, and that sufficient warning was given that the train which killed him was about to move, by ringing the bell; and that no negligence was show®, o® the part of the railroad company, and that, therefore, the negligence of Evans was greater than that of the railroad company, and that the court below was therefore correct in instructing a verdict on account of the contributory negligence of Evans.

Learned counsel for appellant invoke act.175 of the Acts of 1913, page 734, and say that under this act the contributory negligence of Evans can be considered only for the purpose of diminishing the recovery. But the last section of this act provides that it shall not apply to railroad corporations, and shall not amend or repeal any part of act 288 of the Acts of 1911 (page 56 of the General Acts of 1911). This last-named act provides that, when an employee is guilty of contributory negligence, such negligence shall not bar a recovery, provided the negligence of such employee was of a lesser degree than the negligence of such carrier, its officers, agents or employees.

The question for us to determine, therefore, is whether the testimony made an issue of fact for the jury as to whether the negligence of Evans was of a lesser degree than the negligence of the carrier, its officers, agents or employees; and, as the verdict was directed against the plaintiff, we must view the testimony and the inferences reasonably deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. As thus viewed, the testimony may be summarized as follows:

The deceased’s duties consisted in watering, coaling, cleaning and preparing the engines in the switch yard at Leachville, Arkansas, and the discharge of those duties required him to go about the yards at all hours of the night. The tracks at that place run north and south, and consist of the main track and three sidetracks, known as the main track, the brown track, the tank track, and the coal track. The brown track is west and the other two áre east of the main track. The train approached from the south, going north. It went to the depot and then backed down on the brown track. Leachville was the terminal for this train, and it broke up there. The train was put in on the br-own track, and they cut the engine and one car loose and moved them on the main track, passing the switch. Then the engine and car backed in on the tank track and coupled to a string of cars standing there. The impact caused the string of cars standing on the tank track to move several feet, and the body of Evans was found under the wheels of one of those cars shortly afterward. The engine moving the cars which struck Evans was No. 8, and at the time of its arrival Evans and one Persinger were engaged in coaling Engine No. 10, which was standing on the coal track a few feet east of the tank track where the accident occurred. Shortly before the engine backed in on'the tank track, Evans told Persinger he was going to put oil in his lantern and go over and see if No. 8 had coal enough to run the next day, and in going over to see about engine No. 8 it was necessary for Evans to cross the tank track about where his body was found. When the engine backed in on the tank track, the bell was ringing, but the back-up signal was not given. That signal consists in three short blasts of the whistle, and its meaning was well known to all railroad men.

The engineer testified that when he started with his train back on the tank track he was leaning out of the cab window on his left arm, looking south in the direction he was moving. That he had a clear view of the track and the place where Evans’ body was found, and that he did not see any one there, nor did he see any light in that direction, and that there were no roads or streets crossing the tracks in the railroad yards. The fireman testified that he, too, was keeping a lookout, and that he saw no light where Evans was found; and so also did Gamer, the brakeman, who threw the switch for the train to move on to the tank track. The engineer also testified that he left his engine for the night about 7:45 p. m., and that he first heard Evans had been killed about 10 p. m., and that, upon leaving his engine at night, if it had enough coal to run it the next day, it would be left on the brown track, and, if it did not have enough to run it the next day, it would be placed on the coal track. .As bas been stated, Evans was killed on the tank track, and it is argued that from his.knowledge of the customs of the yard be would reasonably bave supposed that the engine would bave been left on the brown track, or the coal track, as be bad no information that the train was too long to remain on the brown track, and that be would not bave reasonably anticipated that the train would back in on that track in the absence of the customary and well known signal that the train was about to back up. the engineer also testified that no rule required the giving of this back-up signal while switching in the yards, and that it was not customary to give it. •

We think there was no testimony from ydiich tbe jury could bave found that Evans bad a lantern which would bave revealed bis presence on tbe tracks. It is true Per-singer testified that Evans said be would fill bis lantern and see if engine No. 8 needed coal. But no one testified that Evans bad put oil in bis lantern, or that be had bis lantern with him when be was killed. Had Evans’ lantern been found smashed or overturned, we might say that tbe jury-could bave inferred that be bad a lighted lantern when be crossed tbe yards, although it was not burning when bis body was found. But no witness testified that be bad a lantern, nor that any lantern was found near him, and there was, therefore, no testimony upon which a finding could bave been made that Evans bad a lantern when he was killed, and, in tbe absence of testimony which would support that finding-, there could be n'o issue of fact in regard to tbe failure to keep a lookout, as Evans was evidently passing between cars when killed, and, if be bad no lantern, 'an ordinary outlook would not bave disclosed bis presence between tbe cars. We do think, however, that tbe failure to blow tbe back-up signal makes a case for tbe jury; and this is true, although tbe railroad company may bave bad no rule requiring tbe engineer to give tbe back-up signal before backing up in the yards.

The degree of care required must always be measured by the .exigencies of the particular case. Railway Co. v. Triplett, 54 Ark. 300. It was competent to prove the nonexistence of a rule or custom to give the back-up signal as tending to show that the failure to give this signal was not negligence; but the absence of a rule or custom is not conclusive of the subject. Yazoo & M. V. Ry. Co. v. Hill, 141 Ark. 378. Ordinary care might demand that the signal be given, and, if so, the absence of such rule or custom would not prevent the failure to give it from being negligence. Negligence can -be predicated upon a failure to provide rules for the protection of persons whose safety may be endangered if a thing is not done which some rule should require to be done.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 257, 147 Ark. 28, 1921 Ark. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-blytheville-leachville-arkansas-southern-railroad-ark-1921.