Gates v. Arkansas & L. M. Ry. Co.

180 So. 835, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 610
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1938
DocketNo. 5611.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 180 So. 835 (Gates v. Arkansas & L. M. 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
Gates v. Arkansas & L. M. Ry. Co., 180 So. 835, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 610 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

John W. Gates met instant death from a violent collision between his coupé automobile and the rear portion of a steel gondola, the most northerly car of a freight train of defendant, on the Sterling-ton-Monroe concrete highway at or near the east boundary line of the city of Monroe, La., about the hour of 8 o’clock p. m., April 21, 1936. His widow, individually and as tutrix of her two minor children, issue of her marriage to deceased, brings suit to recover damages by them expe *836 rienced because of his death. Negligence and carelessness on the part of the railroad company, its agents and employees, is charged to have been the sole cause of the collision and resultant death. A summary of the allegations of negligence contained in the petition follows:

That defendant’s train was suddenly backed (northerly) onto and across said highway and collided with deceased’s car, then being driven by him; that the night was dark, a drizzling rain.was falling, and the string of cars, constituting the train, had no lights or other signals thereon to give notice of its presence to automobiles or pedestrians traveling the highway; nor was said crossing protected by a watchman, flagman or other servant of defendant so as to warn traffic on said highway of the presence and movements of said train; nor were there any signals, signs, .or warning lights of any character at said crossing to warn or give notice to deceased that he was approaching a railroad crossing or that a string of freight cars was being backed toward and onto the crossing; that deceased was ignorant of the hazardous situation then existing on and about the crossing, in fact, was ignorant that the crossing was there, and remained so until within a few feet from it; that all of said signs, signals, and notices should have been given by defendant railway company, and its failure to so do constitutes gross negligence which was the sole cause of the death of deceased.

In the alternative, it is alleged that should it be found and held ' that said crossing was protected by a servant of the railway company at the time of accident, in such event it is averred that the light used by said servant was insufficient to give warning of the approach of defendant’s cars or the movements of its train; that, because of the nature of the surroundings at the place of the accident, traffic conditions thereat, and the angle at which said train was backing, etc., extra precautions on defendant’s part should then and there have been exercised, but that it failed in this duty.

The railroad company’s insurer, 2Etna Casualty & Surety Company, is also joined as defendant.

Defendants admit the alleged accident and death therein of John W. Gates, but deny that it either was the result of, or was contributed to to any extent by, any negligence or carelessness of the railroad company, its agents or servants. They affirmatively set up that flagmen with adequate lights were guarding said crossing at the time of the accident and that also signs, giving notice to the public of the crossing, had been erected on the highway near thereto; that the crossing and the train thereon were easily discernible, and despite same and despite all of said safety precautions and the existence of said signs, said deceased, as he approached said crossing at an excessive rate of speed, did not stop, look or listen, as was his legal duty, but drove heedlessly on until he crashed his car into defendant’s gondola car, then stationary on the highway. Defendants further allege, on information and belief, that immediately prior to the time of the accident deceased had been drinking intoxicating liquor and was driving his car while under the influence of such liquors. It is additionally alleged that deceased, because of his own gross negligence and carelessness, in the respects herein described, met death. This negligence, in the alternative, is also alleged upon in bar of recovery by plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s demands were rejected and she appealed.

Defendant’s track runs from Monroe via Bastrop, La., to Crosset, Ark. It operates no passenger trains thereon. The track out of Monroe extends in a northeasterly direction. The highway from Ba-strop to Monroe, for a considerable distance above and below the scene of the accident, runs ’ almost north and south. Therefore, it crosses the track there at an acute angle. According to the map in the record, the track traverses the road diagonally for a distance of approximately 120 feet. There is a slight rise in the surface of the highway on both sides of and as it approaches the track, the crest of which being not over 2 feet above the main line of the road.

Defendant’s engine with a dozen empty cars was returning from Bastrop to Mon-roe. Before reaching the crossing, all cars except one were detached and left on the main line. The engine with the one car crossed the highway and then backed northeasterly over a switch track (east of and a few feet from the main line) to connect with some ten or twelve empty gondola cars spotted thereon. This being done, the engine, with its train of cars, proceeded southerly from the switch track onto the main line and across the highway, with the intention of backing up again and coupling with the *837 cars firstly left on the main track. These cars measure, on an average, 45 feet in length. The train stopped at the flagman’s signal as its rear car pre-empted the western and central parts of the concrete slab, 18 feet wide. This car’s rear end extended northeasterly beyond the center of the road a few feet. It was in this position when run into by deceased, traveling southerly. It was necessary that the entire train clear the switch track so that the switch could be thrown to admit of the train again backing up on ' the main line to connect with the string of cars originally left thereon.

Plaintiff contends, ánd there is some testimony to support it, that the train was backing across the road when Gates ran into the gondola, but the decided preponderance of the testimony, given by witnesses in the better position to know,* including one for plaintiff, is against this contention. It is not argued nor intimated that Gates’ car was pushed to any extent after the collision. This would have occurred had the train moved northerly thereafter. We are certain it did not stop simultaneously with the collision. The left front part of the coupé was wedged under the gondola and remained there until removed by hand power. Its left front end struck the gondola at an angle at or near the stirrup on its west side, only a few feet from its corner. The coupe’s position, after the accident, lends support to the theory that Gates, on observing the gondola, tried to avert a collision by veering to his right. Had he turned to his left, the tragic results might not have been fatal. There was sufficient space on that side for an automobile to pass.

We are also quite clear in the opinion that the crossing was adequately guarded by Mr. Nutt, a flagman, and by Simon Smith, a negro brakeman. The testimony convinces us of this fact. Surely some member of the train crew had to be at the crossing to signal the engineer, some 450 or 500 feet away, so that he could intelligently direct the train’s movements. Before the signal was given to back the train northerly over the main line, after having stopped, Nutt said he saw and heard the Gates car coming down the highway at a very rapid speed and making considerable noise.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 835, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-arkansas-l-m-ry-co-lactapp-1938.