Gosey v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.

100 So. 2d 311, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 501
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1958
DocketNo. 8765
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 So. 2d 311 (Gosey v. Kansas City Southern Railway 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
Gosey v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 100 So. 2d 311, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 501 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

This is an action in tort wherein plaintiff, Emitt Gosey, seeks to recover damages for pain and suffering in the sum of $2500.00, loss of earnings, $891.45, and hospital and medical expenses, $441.50, or a total of $3832.95, as the result of an accident allegedly occurring in June, 1956, while he was engaged in the loading of pulpwood from a truck to a railroad car of defendant on its tracks at Zwolle, Louisiana, when a train crew of the defendant, without giving any warning or notice of their intention to do so and unknown to plaintiff, by means of a flying switch, switched, “shunted” or "dropped” another railroad car on said track and against the car then being loaded with such great force and impact as to throw plaintiff backward off the railroad car and on his back to the truck, with a stick of pulpwood falling and striking him in the abdomen.

As a result of said accident, plaintiff avers he immediately became sick, suffered pain in his stomach and groin, temporarily ceased work and sat down until a fellow employee completed the task of unloading the truck; that in said accident he sustained a left indirect inguinal hernia and injury to his back. Immediately following the aforesaid accident, plaintiff accompanied the truck driver to the woods for another load, in which he assisted by loading only the smaller sticks. Thereafter he continued to work for some eight to ten days, during which time he complained of pain, and on June 29, 1956, called upon Dr. Norman U. Booker, of Many, Louisiana, who, on examination, found him suffering with a hernia. Plaintiff thereafter, on July 3, 1956, submitted to an operation for surgical repair of the hernia, was hospitalized for a period of 13 days, and discharged and pronounced able to return to work September 10, 1956.

At the time of the alleged accident plaintiff was employed by one S. H. Cade, a pulpwood contractor, to haul and load pulpwood on railroad cars for shipment. On account of his injuries and resultant disabilities, plaintiff was paid compensation in the sum of $330.00, that is, for eleven weeks at $30.00 per week, and medical and hospital expenses in the sum of $421.50 by his employer’s compensation insurer, Old Republic Insurance Company, which joins plaintiff in this action and seeks reimbursement of its aforesaid expenditures for compensation and medical expenses paid to and on behalf of plaintiff.

Defendant denied (1) that an accident occurred, and (2) alternatively, if an accident did occur, that plaintiff’s hernia was caused thereby; (3) and contends further that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and (4) that plaintiff, by working on and about defendant’s railroad cars in its railroad yard, assumed the risk involved during normal switching operations.

The trial court concluded from the evidence that an “incident” or accident, as alleged by plaintiff, did occur but that, from a lack of a preponderance of evidence, plaintiff failed to establish causal connection or relationship between the “incident” or accident and the injuries of which he complained. Accordingly, plaintiff’s demands were rejected, and he has appealed.

For a determination of the issues in this cause, questions of fact are primarily presented for consideration. The evidence sustains His Honor’s conclusions that an accident did occur as claimed by plaintiff. The foreman, James Wedgeworth, arrived at the scene soon after the train departed. He found plaintiff sitting down. The accident was reported to him at that tirqe— [313]*313plaintiff exclaimed: “They liked to got me awhile ago.” Wedgeworth gave little consideration at the time to plaintiff’s complaint of injury. Nevertheless, from this testimony the court concluded an “incident” or accident occurred.

There were, however, only two known witnesses to the accident, plaintiff and a fellow employee, John D. Farrell. Their testimony is that the truck was driven alongside the railroad car for unloading. The railroad car has all the appearance of an open flatcar, that is, one without sides or top but with ends approximately eight feet high. The pulpwood, having a length of approximately four feet, is loaded on these cars in two rows, one on each side extending from one end of the car to the other. On the occasion of this accident, Farrell was on the truck with one foot possibly on the bed of the car, unloading the wood from the truck onto the car by use of a hook. Plaintiff was standing on the railroad car, reaching the wood with his hook and lifting it with his hands and “topping” the layer of wood on the opposite side of the car from the parked truck.

According to the testimony of both witnesses, the accident was caused by the switching of a car into and against the one being loaded. Discrepancies appearing in their testimony as to whether the car being switched directly struck the car being loaded or a string or line of two or three cars, causing the forward one of which to strike the car on which they were working, are immaterial since the important fact about which there was no conflict in their testimony is that the switching of the car constituted the proximate cause of the accident.

Questioned as to the manner in which the accident occurred, plaintiff testified:

“A. Well, we pulled up there, backed up there unloading the truck on the car; John D. was on the front and I was on the back; standing on the car, pulling wood off, crossing it over, and I had a big stick in my hand and I just went to throw it up and they made that switch in there and hit those cars and knocked me over back.
“Q. Knocked you over backwards?
“A. Yes, sir; and the stick of wood fell in my stomach and John D. Farrell pulled it up off of me.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Farrell described the maneuver of the switching of the cars as a “flying switch” —“they throwed in there”; that the car was uncoupled from the train — “they just throw the cars in; the train don’t be onto the car they throwing. It just throws it in and it hits the other cars.”

Testifying as to what happened to plaintiff when the railroad cars collided, Farrell stated:

“Q. And what do you say happened to Emmet Gosey ? A. Well, it throw-ed him across the wood, and I taken my hook and raised the stick of wood up off him. He had a stick of wood in his hand and was fixing to throw it, when it hit.
“Q.- Did he fall on his back, or did he fall on his face ? A. He fell on his back.
“Q. Fell on his back? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Where did the stick of wood fall? A. It fell across him, right across here (indicating). Some of it on his stomach, and some on his side; just fell across him.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Estimates of the weight of the stick of wood which struck plaintiff vary from 30 pounds upward to as much as 75 pounds or more.

Immediately on the occurrence of the accident, plaintiff complained of being injured, and while with Farrell on a trip for another load of wood, Farrell says plaintiff [314]*314continued to complain and held his hand to his side, whereupon he admonished plaintiff in this language to go to a doctor: “Well, I’d just go ahead and go to the doctor.” Plaintiff says that during the eight or ten days following the accident, he continued with his work but did only about half that which he had formerly done, and, on June 29, 1956, reported to Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
100 So. 2d 311, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gosey-v-kansas-city-southern-railway-co-lactapp-1958.