Harrell v. Alabama Great Southern Railroad

5 Tenn. App. 471, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 77
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 471 (Harrell v. Alabama Great Southern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrell v. Alabama Great Southern Railroad, 5 Tenn. App. 471, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 77 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

This is an action for damages. The plaintiff’s intestate was run over by a train of cars near her home on Avenue J, between 31st and 32nd streets in the City of Chattanooga, where the main line of the Belt Railroad ran along Avenue J. near her residence. She was evidently desiring to cross Avenue *472 J. from the east side, where she resided, to the west side, and as the railroad track and the road ran longitudinally on Avenue J, she had to cross the railroad to carry out her purpose. She had an electric iron in her hand and evidently the errand on which she had set forth was in some way connected with it. It was at one o’clock on the 1st day of April, 1925. Apparently she was killed instantly. Her body was mangled and dismembered, and her head crushed and severed. She was a large, fleshy woman, fifty-five years old, about five feet two inches in height, weighed about 180 pounds, and was in good health. Her nephew, a young boy, came the nearest to being an eye-witness to the fatal and lamentable event, which is claimed to have occurred as a result of the negligence of the defendant. This Avenue J. ran north and south, was crossed by streets running east and west in this vicinity, numbered in the direction from north to south as 30th, 31st, 32nd, 33rd and 34th streets, which was a populous part or suburb of the City of Chattanooga.

The train of cars, said by the railroad to have been loaded, and about twenty in number, had been taken from the main line of the Belt Road inside the city limits at Highland Park avenue, and pushed by an engine some four and a half miles toward the suburbs, to be transferred or distributed by a switching crew to other parts of the city; it being designed also to swap engines when this train of cars, was delivered to the other train crew, which evidently was expected to be met about or near the place of the accident. This crew in question did not do any switching.' The train was picked, up, as stated, on the main line of the belt road, and was never taken off or any cars switched. The crew had engine No. 6572, and were taking this train and engine to change with the crew using engine No. 7054, and at the time of the accident the train was being pushed north on Avenue J. by the engine behind, at the time being operated by the Alabama Great Southern Railroad.

It was claimed by Mr. Guinn, foreman, he said, of a switch engine, who was in charge of this train of cars, that when his train stopped the lead or extreme south car from the engine reached to within about forty feet of 32nd street, and that the engine of the train blocked 30th street; that he cut his engine loose so as to enable the traffic to cross. It was claimed he only stopped' about fifteen minutes, and that during this entire time the train was not cut or disconnected in any way, save as stated, when the engine withdrew temporarily at 30th street to accommodate the traffic. He states that his next move was to couple up and shove the cars further south about eight or nine car lengths and stop. This he claims shoved the cars across 32nd *473 street, but he does not state how far. He says the ears stood there between two. and'three minutes, when they backed north about 200 feet,' he thought, north of 32nd street, and then they saw the lady lying in between the tracks. There were three of them there, and he does not know which discovered her first. He said the blood, limbs, clothing and stuff was south of the body about ten or twelve, or maybe twenty feet. On re-direct examination he was asked:

“Q1. From the time yo;ur train, first stopped, with this end of the box ear a few feet north of 32nd street, from that time until the body was found had your train or not, a part of your train, occupied the space that entire time where the body was found? A. Yes sir, yes sir.
“Q. At no time from the time you first went in there and stopped with your engine down about 30th street, and the hind end up there at 32nd street, at that point where the body was found, liad a part of'your train been over that very spot and located on it all of that time? A. The space was all covered up from about forty feet of -32nd street back to this lumber yard at 30th street. It was all covered up back to the other crossing, to the 30th street crossing I mean.
“Q. In other words, your engine was on the north end? A. Yes sir.
“Q. And this movement that you made to the south, had your engine ever reached the point where the body was found? A. No sir, no sir, it was right around 12, 10 to 12 cars, the engine lacked that much of getting there'.”

He had ridden, he said, on this front end of the car until it stopped, and then had gotten down, and had walked down across 32nd street to see what the other engine' was doing, which was still on down at least two blocks further, in the neighborhood of 34th street, and from that point he gave the signal.

The other members of the crew substantially corroborate Mr. Guinn as to these particulars, as far as their attention was drawn to them. Mr. Guinn testified that the train was not disconnected otherwise than as indicated at the engine; that it was connected with air brakes, and that when cars are disconnected at streets to permit passage over cross-streets, that the man on the engine does that; that when you cut the train and pull back you turn an angle cock on there, but when you want to leave an opening, then somebody had to couple the air and turn it loose. Asked what caused him to stop, Mr. Guinn said “there was an engine on down about — he could not say for sure — about half a mile, though, something like that, he did not remember the distance.” He did not know whether it was about 33rd or 34th street, or whether *474 between 32nd or 33rd street; it was down that way, but the Chattanooga Wagon Company was where it was. It appears that this engine he saw was the one he was to meet. Asked again why he stayed down there fifteen or twenty minutes, he said:

“The thing, being on the main line, I had to shove these ears by him. He had to get in a passing track and let me shove by him. He was right down on a little ways from me. ’ ’

As stated, he had gotten off the south car of his train, and had walked down across 32nd street to see what this engine was going to do'. He did not go down to it, but when the engine shoved on down to that next street down there, to the Wagon works, he expected him to get in the clear down there. There was not room to hold him, and he backed on south. The engine he had (7054) blew the whistle one time to stop, and when he did the witness said he stopped this train he had, with twenty ears and engine, and stood there. He said it stopped eight or nine cars over 32nd street; that the other engine whistled three times tO' back up, and that he knew he could not get in the clear down there, and the engine, the train and cut of cars stood there between two and three minutes, and backed north. This witness stated also, that in the meantime the other fellow had done some switching.

On the other hand the deceased, Mrs. Harrell, lived on Avenue J. in the second house north of 32nd street, and her nephew, a boy, testifies that on the day plaintiff’s intestate was killed he came on Avenue J. between 33rd and 34th street, and walked north on Avenue J.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 471, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrell-v-alabama-great-southern-railroad-tennctapp-1927.