Gibson v. T. & P. Ry. Co.

121 So. 382, 10 La. App. 678, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 150
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1929
DocketNo. 11,504
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 So. 382 (Gibson v. T. & P. 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
Gibson v. T. & P. Ry. Co., 121 So. 382, 10 La. App. 678, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 150 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

JONES, J.

Plaintiff sues to recover $12,-000.00 for the death of George McCalip, her twenty-year-old son by a former marriage, who was instantaneously killed on April 14, 1927, while sitting or lying on the cross-ties of defendant’s track, either asleep or ill, at 6:35 a. m., by a train of defendant, Southeast of Donaldsonville.

In its answer defendant denies the allegations of each and every paragraph, but does not plead contributory negligence. The case was tried by a jury, which returned a verdict for $6000.00.

Motion for a new trial was refused by the District Judge, who gave his reasons as follows:

“The issue presented to the jury was a rather close question of fact, which, from the evidence, they resolved in favor of the plaintiff and awarded a verdict for $6,-000.00. They were instructed by the court as to what is conceived to be the law governing the duties of an engineer on a rail-, road train to keep a lookout at all times for objects which may be or come upon the railroad tracks, and evidently came to the conclusion that under the facts in the case the engineer was negligent in not seeing the unfortunate victim in. this accident, in time to avoid killing him. The law as I take it is, that the jury’s verdict is entitled to great weight unless it be manifestly erroneous, and I am not prepared to say that it is in this case. If I am wrong in my view of the matter now I think there is a good record made on which the error, if any, can be corrected by the appellate court.
“I am of the opinion, however, that the amount awarded is more than is warranted under the evidence, but that, also, is a matter which if wrong, can be corrected on appeal without the necessity of trying this case all over again.”

We do not pass upon the ruling of the trial judge on the objections to the testimony of defendant’s witnesses on. the [680]*680ground that contributory negligence had not been pleaded, because the sole question before us is whether, under all the circumstances of the case, the engineer and fireman had the last clear chance to avoid the accident.

This principle is stated in the case of McGuire v. V. S. & P. Ry. Co., 46 La. Ann. 1543, 60 So. 457, in the first paragraph of the syllabus prepared by the -court, as follows:

“In an action for damages against a railroad company by the surviving parents for the loss of their son run over and killed by the locomotive, the defense of contributory negligence will not avail, if by reasonable care on the part of those in charge of the train the accident could have been avoided. * * *.”

There is very little dispute about the facts, which may be briefly summarized, as follows:

The accident occurred in the open country about 6:35 p. m., April 14, 1927, where the Winchester Plantation Road crosses the track of defendant. Thi's road was used by the laborers on the plantation and was traveled by the wagons and mules in going back and forth to the rice plantation. On the morning of the accident there was no fog. The day was clear, and the track was straight for several miles. The train which struck the decedent was coming South toward New Orleans, at a speed of 50 or 52 miles per hour. It consisted of an engine, a tender and eight coaches, the length of each coach being between 60 and 70 feet and the length of the entire train, about 600 feet. The deceased was a little more than six feet in height -and weighed from 155 to 160 pounds. The roadbed was about four feet higher than the level of the ground. There were no eye witnesses to the accident, except the engineer and the fireman.

The engineer testifies that he first saw the decedent about 300 or 350 feet away, on the left hand side of the track; that the object appeared to be at the end of the cross-ties, or out on the embankment near the ends of the ties; it was in a stooping position and he could only see the shape of the back; it looked like a dog or a calf, or something of the kind in the weeds at the side of the track; he did not realize it was a man until he was within 150 or 250 feet of the' object, when he began to blow his whistle and put on his brakes, but it was too late; he thought that the man must have raised up, although he did not see him; he stopped his train as quickly as he could and backed up two or three car lengths to where the man was lying and found that he was dead; the Johnson grass by the tracks was perhaps three feet high and it was growing up near the end of the cross-ties and the man was about eight or ten feet east of the plantation road. The body was knocked about four or five feet.

The fireman testified that he first saw the object about 500 feet away on his side of the track; that he “never saw his face at all, only his shoulder and head;” it looked like a dog or a buzzard and he did not recognize it as a man until he was within about 200 or 250 feet, when he called to the engineer, who was already blowing his whistle; the man was sitting in a stooped position but he could see his shoulders and head; his seat is about twelve or fourteen feet above the track.

The record contains two photographs which were taken on April 23rd, nine days after the accident happened. These photographs show that the Johnson grass did not cover the ends of the ties and that it was not sufficiently high to cover the body of the man sitting on the - end of a tie.

[681]*681A test was made by the two Gibsons, the step-father and his brother, at the scene of the accident on the day the photographs were taken and both of these witnesses testified that a man sitting on the rail could easily be seen from a point 1800 feet up the track. Another test was. made by disinterested witnesses on the day before the trial, which was held on February 13, 1928. Although the day was cloudy, the witnesses testified that they could see a man sitting on the end of the cross-ties from a distance of 1600 feet. The engineer testified that he might possibly stop such a train, going at 50 miles per hour, in about 600 feet, but usually it would take a much greater .distance.

As the engineer says that he could only see “the shape of the back,’’ and it looked like “a dog or a calf,” and as the fireman, who had a better view, says “I never did see his face at all, nothing but his shoulders and his head,” we conclude that the man was sitting with his back toward the train.

The evidence seems to us to justify the finding of the jury, for we are convinced that the engineer and fireman, under all the circumstances of the case, if they had been acting with the ordinary diligence required of such employees, should have seen the deceased in time to stop the train and should have done so, as the man, who had his back toward them, gave no sign of being awake or capable of moving.

A similar point has been before the court in several cases. In Blackburn vs. Railway Co., 144 La. 520, 80 So. 70S, where an intoxicated man, sitting on cross-ties, or leaning against the rail, was killed near the station in Colfax, La., about 4:30 a. m., on September 9, 1915, the court uses the following language:

“We conclude, therefore, that deceased was not lying down on the ground with his head between the cross-ties, but was sitting or reclining on the cross-ties and leaning against the rail in such a position that, with a good headlight, or in the daytime, he could have been seen by the engineer and fireman, had they been keeping a proper look-out for several hundred, feet. * * *

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Related

Pinckley v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.
165 So. 504 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1936)
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133 So. 517 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
121 So. 382, 10 La. App. 678, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-t-p-ry-co-lactapp-1929.