Fisher v. Walters

428 So. 2d 431
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 23, 1983
Docket82-C-1827
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 428 So. 2d 431 (Fisher v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Walters, 428 So. 2d 431 (La. 1983).

Opinion

428 So.2d 431 (1983)

Mrs. Minnie Fisher, Jr., Widow of Allen Charles FISHER, et al.
v.
Forrest WALTERS, Richard Hadden, Sr., and Illinois Central Gulf Railroad.

No. 82-C-1827.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

February 23, 1983.
Rehearing Denied March 25, 1983.

*432 James D. Caldwell, Richard V. Burns, Baton Rouge, for applicant.

Wood T. Sparks, Thompson, Sparks, Cudd & Dean, Monroe, for respondents.

WATSON, Justice.

This lawsuit concerns a February 26, 1975, collision between a train and a car in which the car's only occupant, Allen Charles Fisher, Jr., was killed. Plaintiff is the widow of the deceased driver, Mrs. Minnie Fisher, Jr., individually and on behalf of their six minor children.[1] Named as defendants are Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Company and two of its employees, Forrest Walters and Richard Hadden, Sr. The trial court gave a judgment for Mrs. Fisher, individually and on behalf of her minor children, against all defendants for $840,000. The Court of Appeal reversed the judgment and dismissed plaintiff's suit. Fisher v. Walters, 415 So.2d 343 (La.App. 2 Cir.1982). A writ was granted to review the judgment of the Court of Appeal. 420 So.2d 451 (La., 1982).

FACTS

The train's home terminal is Bossier City. It was proceeding west from Vicksburg to Shreveport when the accident occurred at the Thomastown crossing in Madison Parish where Louisiana Highway No. 7 [then number 3030] crosses the railroad tracks. A pink house is located 2,026.12 feet east of the crossing; mile post number nine is 1,734.68 feet east and a whistle post is 906.58 feet east. The operative facts of the accident are reflected in the testimony of the following witnesses:

The conductor of the train, Lee Jefferson Clark, testified in deposition that the train was over a mile long with five engines and one hundred and eight cars, which average fifty-five feet in length. Clark was in the caboose. The train left Vicksburg at 10:10 A.M., forty minutes past its scheduled departure time. It hit the car in Thomastown, nine miles from the railroad yard, at 10:50 A.M. The car was going north and "must have went dead" (Depo. 38). Five engines and twenty-three cars passed the point of impact before the train came to a stop. It was a good stop; Clark did not feel the impact.

Defendant Forrest Walters testified that he was working as a fireman and actually running train number 269 the day of the accident. He was sitting in the single right seat by the controls. He was not allowed to run ahead of schedule, but was sometimes as much as twelve hours behind schedule. There is a curve at Mound which is located near mile post seven. From Mound to the point of the accident there are two miles of straight track. The accident occurred in February when the trees were bare. The maximum authorized timetable speed for the train was forty-five miles per hour. The speedometer on the train was not working that day. Walters and engineer *433 Hadden had just checked the speed between mile posts seven and eight, and eight and nine, and the train was running approximately forty miles per hour. The front end of the Fisher vehicle was on the track and the train struck the right front fender. According to Walters, if the train were a mile away from a crossing and he saw a vehicle stopped on the tracks, he would maintain speed. If he were half a mile from an intersection and saw a vehicle stopped on the tracks, he would not slow or stop. If he were a quarter of a mile away from the vehicle stopped on the tracks, he would not try and stop the train without an indication that the vehicle could not or would not move. Automobiles often pull up on the track but proceed across after being warned. Walters did not know how quickly he could stop the train.[2] Walters first saw Fisher's car when he was ten to fifteen car lengths away. He said he applied the emergency brakes five to six car lengths from the crossing when it became apparent the Fisher car was not going to move. Red signal lights come on when the emergency brakes are applied. Walters had frequently observed vehicles stopped on the tracks. "... I don't know why they do it, and ah—when you warn them, they get out of the way." (Tr. 244) Walters said he could not stop the train every time an automobile was on the track.

Richard H. Hadden, the locomotive engineer on the train, was in the left front seat watching the track for obstructions. He remembered checking the mileage on the right side of the train between mile posts seven and eight. Hadden first saw Fisher's vehicle eight or ten car lengths from the intersection.[3] The train whistle was blowing and the headlights were burning. When the train was five or six car lengths from the automobile, Walters put on the emergency brakes. Hadden said that, if a vehicle were on the crossing when the train was 1,000 feet away, he would blow the whistle and expect the vehicle to get off the track. Unless someone were flagging to indicate distress, he would not try to stop. At 500 feet, he would probably go into emergency. However, it takes half a mile for the train to stop. Hadden related an incident in Rayville when a car stayed on the track until the train got right on top of it before moving off and the train went into emergency unnecessarily.

William R. Pittman, the brakeman on the train, was riding on the left side of the cab behind Hadden. He spotted the Fisher vehicle when the train was ten to fifteen car lengths from the intersection. According to Pittman, the train went into emergency four or five car lengths from the intersection.

In answers to interrogatories, defendants averred that the train was going thirty-five to forty miles per hour. There was no tape in the recorder which measures the train's journey.

Jack Lott, Jr., who investigated the accident for the state police, stated that Fisher's body was lying in the back seat of the car. His seat belt was not fastened. The white automobile had been knocked fifty feet from the point of impact. According to what the train personnel told Lott at the scene, the train's speed was forty-five miles per hour. The weather was clear and dry.

Boone Halbach, Madison Parish Superintendent of Education, testified about Fisher's income at the time of the accident. Fisher was described as a good employee with a bright future who had been a principal a year and a half. His salary with bonuses was approximately $19,000 per annum.

Rosalie Watson, a resident of Thomastown, testified that she stopped at the intersection. When she first saw the train it was beyond the pink house [2,026.12 feet east]. Because she was in an old 1968 car, she was not going to try to beat the train and she parked. She observed Fisher arrive *434 simultaneously from the opposite direction, stop at the cross-bucks sign and drive on to the tracks. Fisher then sat "shaking" and "fumbling" in his car. (Tr. 267) The car was also shaking while Fisher was looking down, apparently trying to start it. In Ms. Watson's opinion the train was traveling about fifty miles per hour and did not slow down. The train started blowing when it got to the number nine sign [1,734.68 feet east]. At that time, Fisher's car was "... there to stay until the train got him." (Tr. 292) The train did not blow continuously after the number nine mile post; it blew a long whistle, and then a short, and then another short one before the impact. She saw a white light on the train but never a red one. After the accident, Ms. Watson drove down the road to survey the area of the pink house and the number nine sign.

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Bluebook (online)
428 So. 2d 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-walters-la-1983.