Hartford Fire Ins. v. Texas & N. O. R.

70 So. 2d 767, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 621
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1954
DocketNo. 19703
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 So. 2d 767 (Hartford Fire Ins. v. Texas & N. O. R.) 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
Hartford Fire Ins. v. Texas & N. O. R., 70 So. 2d 767, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 621 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.-

The plaintiff, Hartford Fire Insurance Company, subrogee of Charles E. Spahr, instituted this suit against the defendants, Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company and the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, endeavoring to recover the sum of $1,080.40, which it had paid to Charles E. Spahr, under a policy of insurance, in, corn sequence of a collision between a 1947 White truck and trailer, owned by Spahr, and a gondola type freight car being pushed by a switch engine operated by employees of the Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company, on June 13, 1947, at í :00 p. m.

The defendant, Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company answered denying that its employees were guilty of any negligence in the premises and, in the alternative, pleaded the contributory negligence of the operator of the truck, Louis Bladsacker, an employee of Spahr.

By stipulation the suit against the Southern Pacific Railroad Compány was dismissed.

From a. judgment of the lower court in favor .of the defendant dismissing the suit, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The record reveals that the insured vehicle, -a White truck and trailer, described as a “1600 gallon tank wagon straight track”, was struck by defendant’s train shortly after it emerged from the Pan Am Distributing Station, located on the west bank of the Haryey Canal. Exit from this station is afforded through the medium of a. shell surfaced driveway which crosses defendant’s tracks and leads to a public road designated as Destrehan Avenue. To reach this avenue it was initially necessary to cross, a spur track and then the' main line. The accident occurred on the main line at about 1 o’clock in the afternoon. The -train, consisted of a locomotive backing up and pushing a single gondola freight car. It was proceeding away from the river so as to advance from the right of vehicles driv-. ing out of the gate of the Pan Am station. To the left of .the gate, attached to the inside of the steel fence, is a sign which reads “Caution Railroad Crossing”. The approach of the train, as it neared the plant, was.masked by a bo-xcar “spotted” on the spur track in front of the adjoining property, the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, or to the right-of the Pan Am exit and approximately -nine feet- removed therefrom. . From the entrance or exit of the Pan Am property to the center of the defendant’s main line, where the accident occurred, the distance, is approximately twenty-one and a half- or twenty-two feet. The testimony is conflicting as to the exact distance at which the train was no longer hidden by the spotted boxcar. It is conceded that both, the train and the truck were moving very slowly; the train at about four miles per hour and that of the truck from four to “less than 10 miles per hour”; as a result of their respective speeds, when the collision occurred, the train pushed the truck only about seven or eight feet and both vehicles came to rest on the farther side of the driveway.

Only two witnesses testified on behalf of the plaintiff, Bladsacker, the operator of the [769]*769truck, and John Winston Harris, a passenger therein. .

Bladsacker related that he had been a truck driver, in the employ of the Charles E. Spahr Pan Am Company at Harvey, Louisiana, for approximately ten years and that he traversed these railroad tracks each day and was fully cognizant of their constant usage by the defendant’s trains; when leaving the Pan Am property, driving at a'speed óf four miles per hour, he could' not see to his right because of the boxcar spotted approximately four feet from the entrance on the spur track; after he1 passed the-boxCar and was about one half foot from the main track, the engine of defendant “pops up there pushing a gondola”; that there Was no bell ringing or whistle being blown .by the train nor was a ground switchman signal-ling the approach of the train; a man seated on the gondola car yelled “stop” just a.s the truck was starting to cross the tracks, but that he did not have sufficient time to obey the command and thus avoid the collision; the gondola car struck his truck on the right side about one-quarter óf the length of the truck from'the front thereof and, in consequence, the gondola pushed the truck approximately eight feet before coming to a complete' stop. ,

Harris, whose testimony was taken by deposition and introducd in evidence on the day of the trial, related that he was an employee of the A. O. Smith Meter Corporation on the day of the accident and was ridr ing in the truck, as a passenger, seated to the right of the driver;, there was a fence around the Pan Am Station and that the enT trance thereto or exit therefrom was formed by a gate; there were two sets of tracks between the gate and the main road,. the first of which, a .spur, was located about four feet from the gate and the main track about eight feet from the spur track; he reiterated that these distances were only approximated, as he had never actually measured them; there was a boxcar located “less than fifteen feet” on the spur track; the operator, who was driving the truck “under ten miles an hour”

“* * * drove straight out of the .gate across the first track and was on the second track when we noticed this • gondola car which was pushed by the switch engine approaching us from be-. hind this box car. In other words, we could not see the gondola until we got past this boxcar, and when we saw1 it there were either two or three men standing in the gondola car. They began to frantically wave their hands at uS, and the' engineer, ‘ I guess, and’ I; think I hit the driver on the leg and told 'him to get off the track, "but he tried to ■speed the engine up.1 Before we could get off the track, however, the gondola’1 ■ car hit'us and pushed us-Sideways about seven or eight feet.” ■

Harris .further stated,,.that the train whistle was, not blowing nor was the bell ringing and that, if either of these auditory signals had emanated from the train he is convinced “we- would., never have come out on either of the tracks”, yet when interrogated whether he. was listening for any signals from the approaching, train, Harris conceded “I don’t think I was:. I ■Was just riding, that’s all.”1 Harris was a resident of Houston, Texas, -not in the employ of the Spahr Company,' although his company had installed a'gásoline meter .on the truck, but he did not have any interest in the litigation.

There were eight witnesses who testified on behalf of the defendant,. five of whom, H. S. Byers, Frank Raggio, Kenneth Andrew Genin, Peter F. Dassinger and Harold A- Suchand, were members of the train crew. ■ The engineer and fireman were- seated, in their respective places, in the cab of the engine and the other three men were riding in the gondola car, one on the end nearest the engine and two on the forward or leading end.thereof.. They all conceded the location of where the boxcar was spotted, but related that the train was moving very slowly; that the whistle was blown for the -Pan Am crossing as well as previous crossings and that the bell, automatically controlled, was ringing continuously. In addition, Salvador Boffone, Sr., an independent witness employed by the Southern [770]*770Shell Fish Company, -situated about three hundred feet from the Pan Am Distributing Station, testified positively that he heard the whistle blowing and the bell ringing immediately prior to the accident.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rico v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad
140 So. 2d 198 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. Co. v. the WC Harms
134 F. Supp. 636 (S.D. Texas, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 So. 2d 767, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-fire-ins-v-texas-n-o-r-lactapp-1954.