Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Lokey

25 S.E.2d 921, 69 Ga. App. 403, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 12, 1943
Docket30067.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 S.E.2d 921 (Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Lokey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Lokey, 25 S.E.2d 921, 69 Ga. App. 403, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 97 (Ga. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Felton, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

With reference to the collision the plaintiff, testified: “My automobile collided with a Georgia Railroad engine in Thomson on March 2 of this year. I was in the automobile going from my home to the station. I had to cross the Georgia Railroad tracks to get from my home to the station. By station I mean my gasoline filling-station. . . That is about 40 or 50 yards from the Georgia Railroad track. I left home that morning between 7:30 and a quarter to eight, fast time. The weather, was foggy and raining and very misty. . . It was dark, it was right around between light and sun-up. . . It was dark, I had my lights on. I was driving a Chevrolet sedan automobile. I reached the railroad. I had been going at a rate of speed of around 15 miles an *405 hour. I slowed up slower than that when I reached the railroad. . . When I reached the second sidetrack I would say I was going 10 or 15 miles an hour. On approaching the railroad track I looked to see if I could' see a train or engine on the track, and listened to see if I could hear a train or engine on the track. There was not any light burning on that railroad nor any bell ringing on the railroad. I was hit by the back end of the tender. I first saw the engine approaching, I would say, just the instant, a second, before it hit me. After I saw it I couldn’t do anything to prevent it hitting me. . . The Georgia Railroad & Banking Company did not have some .one preceding that train that hit me as it ran backwards. I couldn’t tell how fast that engine was travelling that hit me. . . This collision occurred on Main Street in Thomson, Georgia. That street is largely travelled; it is the main thoroughfare through town, from Augusta and over in Carolina to Athens and Atlanta.”

The plaintiff on cross-examination testified: “I go back and forth across that crossing six or eight times a day. . . That was on March 2, fast time, the same time as we have now. It would be a little lighter then. I had the lights on. You could see across the street. . . It was raining torrents that morning. I had my windshield wiper going. With reference to whether the left window was up, that window is cracked. It was raining on it. You could see out. I did not see the train because there-was'not any light going and there was not a flagman on the track. I slowed up. There were no buildings or trees or anything between me and the train that I know of; the only thing was the depot. I expect that was 75 or 125 or 150 feet. The engine had passed the depot when it hit me, I was on the crossing when it hit me. I couldn’t tell you what it was that kept me from seeing the engine. I looked, naturally I looked, I don’t cross it unless I do. I couldn’t tell you what kept me from seeing it. I know I didn’t see it. You didn’t have a flagman on the track and the lights were not burning. That was one reason I didn’t see it. . . It was light enough for me to see somebody across the street; you could see some. You could see something as big as a railroad engine; yet I didn’t see it and didn’t hear it, and didn’t know it was there until two or three feet before it hit me. . . Referring to the glass on my left-hand side I spoke to a man in a car that morning. He was parked in the regu *406 lar parking lot. I passed by him. I threw up my hand to him. That was right in the middle of the parking "lot; in the middle of Eailroad Street. That was a distance of 10 or 12 feet, not over 15, on the left-hand side of the street. I was going down the middle of the street and he was in the first parking space. That was Mr. Langford. I didn’t know who it was that morning. I didn’t realize who it was until the last two or three weeks. I did not remember that I had spoken to him. He told me about it. . . I remember having thrown up my hand to speak to somebody. I did not remember it was Mr. Langford. I thought it was Hill Matthews I spoke to. I was 30 or 40 feet from the track when I spoke to Mr. Langford.”

Mrs. Mildred Lokey testified for the plaintiff: “I am the wife of Earl Lokey. . . I recall the collision that his car had with the Georgia Eailroad locomotive on March 2 of this year. . . It was very dark. We had to turn on our lights because of the fog and rain . .”

William Pilgrim testified for the plaintiff: “I was in the City of Thomson on the 2nd day of March, 1942, when a locomotive engine struck the automobile of Earl Lokey. I was standing in front of the Eagle Café that morning. The distance from there to the railroad I would say is 30 yards. I saw this collision. It was dark when the collision happened. It was drizzling rain and there was fog. I would say this train was backing around 25 miles an hour when it hit this automobile of Mr. Lokey. Mr. Lokey was not going fast as he was approaching the track. . . I thought he was going to pull in at the café, he was driving so slow. I imagine Mr. Lokey was driving 12 or 15 miles an hour. I did not see any light at all on the back of the engine. Those eyes, so to speak, were not winking on the side. There was no one on the ground preceding that engine until after the rain stopped. The engine dragged the ear of Mr. Lokey 15 or 18 feet towards Atlanta before it stopped. . . I did not hear the bell of the engine ringing before and at the time it struck the car. It was not ringing. No whistle was blowing. I did not see anything done there by the engine crew to indicate that engine was going to be driven across that crossing. The flagman didn’t have any lantern where it could be seen. . . I saw the engine before the collision took place. I could see further than 90 feet. With reference to whether there *407 was any reason Mr. Lokey could not see the train as well as I could, he was not standing out there on the sidewalk. I don’t know whether there was any reason he could not see the train as well as I could.”

A. T. Langford testified for the plaintiff: '“It was raining and kind of foggy. . . You could see everything all right. . . Lokey was running around 15 miles an hour, I guess, slowing up for the station. The bell to that engine was not ringing at the time the engine approached the crossing. I never saw any lights at all. Those winking eyes or lights that indicate the approach of a train . . were not working. There was no bell ringing or no lights burning at all that I saw, and I was facing the track: There was no man or flagman preceding that engine as it backed. . . I saw the engine coming out from behind the depot. I saw it all the way as it got to the crossing. . . I was on this side of the center line of Eailroad Street, where I parked. . . I had a plain view.”

■ A certified copy of an ordinance of the City of Thomson was introduced 'in evidence by the plaintiff which made it unlawful to operate an engine through Thomson in excess of IS miles per hour and fail to signal the approach of an engine to a crossing in said town by tolling the bell thereon.

The testimony of defendant’s witnesses was to the effect that the engine was running at a rate of speed much less than IS miles per hour; that the bell on the engine was ringing; that the crossing signal mechanism was operating and that a flagman preceded the engine with an electric lantern.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.E.2d 921, 69 Ga. App. 403, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-railroad-banking-co-v-lokey-gactapp-1943.