Flanders v. Arkansas & Louisiana Missouri Ry. Co.

56 So. 2d 151, 220 La. 194, 220 La. 193, 1951 La. LEXIS 982
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 10, 1951
DocketNo. 39695
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 So. 2d 151 (Flanders v. Arkansas & Louisiana Missouri Ry. Co.) 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
Flanders v. Arkansas & Louisiana Missouri Ry. Co., 56 So. 2d 151, 220 La. 194, 220 La. 193, 1951 La. LEXIS 982 (La. 1951).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

F. D. Flanders, a resident of the State of Texas who operates his business under the trade name of Flanders Construction Company, instituted this suit against Arkansas and Louisiana-Missouri Railway Company to recover the value of a “K-7, .176 inch chassis, International Truck, equipped with an 8 footr4 yard Anthony dump-bed, a 300 Watt, 6 Volt generator, and other supplementary equipment” which he alleges was destroyed on March 2, 1949 when it was run into by the caboose of a freight train of the defendant railroad company while backing on its main track at the Bastrop mill of the International Paper Company at Bastrop, Louisiana.

Plaintiff alleges that he had a contract with the International Paper Company to repair the western wall of the No. 2 Nash Pump Room of its mill and that in order to do the work it was necessary to spray the wall by a certain operation which is referred to as gunite work. The western wall of the mill is situated along the east edge of the right of way of the defendant railroad company for á distance of several hundred feet and the No. 2 Nash Pump Room where plaintiff was engaged in performing his work at the time is approximately at the central point of that wall. The right of way of the defendant consists of a strip of land occupied by three railroad tracks, the center track .being the main line of the railroad and that on the east, the one which is used by the railroad to service the paper mill.

It appears that instead of using a scaffold on which his employee could stand in order to spray the wall, the rear end of the truck was used as a platform on which he stood. When, as was the case on this [198]*198occasion, there were any 'box cars of the railroad company on the east side track which interfered with placing the truck close enough to the wall, plaintiff’s employees, with the assistance of the paper mill’s employees, separated or moved the cars with trucks of the paper mill company so that plaintiff’s truck could be conveniently placed between them. The gunite machine which we understand was used to force the supply of spraying mixture through a hose was located across the railroad tracks and the hose was run alongside and under the tracks in order to reach the man who stood on the truck who did the spraying.

Plaintiff alleges that about 2:45 o’clock p. m. on March 2, 1949, while his truck was maneuvered into the position required to do the work, a northbound train of the railroad company was proceeding on the center or main track and that as it approached the paper mill the crewmen observed the truck on which his employee was at the moment, engaged in doing the guniting work on the paper mill’s wall; that the crewmen were aware of the fact that the train could not proceed past this point until the truck had been moved into a position that would allow the train to clear it and that in order to avoid damaging the truck or injuring plaintiff’s employees, the train stopped at a point shortly south of the place occupied by the truck and allowed plaintiff's employees to stop their work and move the truck out of position to allow the train to pass. That after the truck had been moved the train passed safely by, continued north and stopped at a point where the last car, or caboose, stood 100 feet or more north of, or past the point where plaintiff’s truck was.

Plaintiff then alleges that after the train had passed the point where his truck was that his employees again moved the truck back and re-parked it with its rear portion against the west wall of the paper mill and resumed their operations which had been interrupted..

He alleges further that shortly thereafter, without any warning, the railroad company’s employees started to back the train in a southerly direction; that no whistle was blown nor any bell rung to advise his employees that the train was backing, although the train crew well knew or should have known the dangerous position occupied by the truck at that moment. He next alleges that his employees saw the approaching train and promptly 'began calling and waving in an effort to have it stop its backward progress and also attempted to move the truck into a position of safety, but the truck stalled and before it could be freed, was struck by the caboose of the train and as the train continued its backward progress the truck became compressed and mangled and finally became wedged under the train, resulting in the derailment of the rear portion of the train, at which time and only then did it come to a stop.

[200]*200Plaintiff also alleges that no flagman or brakeman, nor any other employee of the railroad company was at the hack part of this train at the time it began to hack nor at any time thereafter and that all of this, together with its failure to give any other warning or signal constituted the grossest negligence on its part and that these acts of negligence were the sole and proximate cause of the damages sustained by him. He sets out the value of his truck and equipment which was destroyed as being the sum of $1,916.82, which amount he alleges he is entitled to recover from the defendant together with the sum of $210.00 which he was forced to pay as rental for similar equipment in order to complete the contract he was performing for the paper mill.

In the alternative plaintiff pleads that in the event the court should find his employees to have been guilty of any negligence under the facts alleged, defendant through its employees had the last clear chance of avoiding the accident and its resulting damages.

The defendant filed its answer in which it denies that its employees were negligent in any manner and alleges affirmatively that in 'backing the train a warning whistle was blown, the bell was ringing, and that a brakeman whose duty it is to stand on top of the caboose was at his place ready to relay signals to others of the crewmen who stood on box cars at stated intervals and relayed the signal as they got it to the engineer.

The defendant denies the plaintiff’s allegation to the effect that the train was stopped south of the point where the truck was, in order to allow plaintiff’s employees to remove it and thus clear the main track, and avers that the train proceeded in a northerly direction, past the truck in the position it was at the time, and continued some 100 feet north .before stopping. It avers that the truck at that time was in a safe position as evidenced by the fact that the entire train passed it without striking it and that subsequent thereto plaintiff’s employees deliberately and without any regard for defendant’s rights placed the truck in such a position that a small portion of its front end extended much closer to the main line track than was its position when the train 'had passed it going north, and sufficiently close to cause the accident which resulted.

Assuming the position of a plaintiff in reconvention defendant sets out practically all of the facts just related and avers that the sole, only and proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of plaintiff’s employees in backing a truck which they knew or should have known would have been struck by a train in the yards of the defendant railroad company which was using its main track at the moment. It sets out the damage alleged to have been sustained to its freight equipment by rea[202]*202son of the wreck, the whole amounting to the sum of $5,098.49 for which it prays for judgment against the plaintiff in re-convention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 So. 2d 151, 220 La. 194, 220 La. 193, 1951 La. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanders-v-arkansas-louisiana-missouri-ry-co-la-1951.