Haynes v. Louisiana Ry. & Nav. Co.

74 So. 538, 140 La. 1019
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 12, 1917
DocketNo. 21317
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 74 So. 538 (Haynes v. Louisiana Ry. & Nav. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haynes v. Louisiana Ry. & Nav. Co., 74 So. 538, 140 La. 1019 (La. 1917).

Opinion

SOMMERVILLE, J.

The mixed train of the defendant company, on which plaintiff was a passenger, was wrecked; and he suffered an inguinal hernia, with some bruises; .for which he asked $11,000 in damages. The jury rendered a verdict in his favor for $2,-000. Defendant appealed. Plaintiff, on his brief, refers to an answer to the appeal filed by him, in which he asked for an amendment of the judgment, and an increase to $5,000; but the answer is not found in the record.

Plaintiff charges fault and neglect on the part of defendant, and says that the wreck of the train and the injury to him were due to the bad and defective condition of the roadbed of defendant, which was known to the officers of defendant; and that the train was running at a high rate of speed.

In a supplemental petition, filed October 29, 1914, plaintiff alleged error in fixing the date of the wreck on July 14, 1913, and corrected it so as to read August 14, 1913.

In a second supplemental petition, filed February 1, 1915, plaintiff alleged as an additional ground of fault and negligence the breaking of an axle on one, of the freight cars of the train, which also caused the wreck.

Defendant moved to strike out the amended petitions for the reason that they contradict, and conflict with, the allegations of the original petition, and change the issues there presented.

Defendant also pleaded the prescription of one year to the supplemental petitions.

The motion and plea were properly overruled. The amended and supplemental peti[1021]*1021tions presented the same cause of action as was contained in the original petition. The first amendment was of a mere clerical error in stating the date of the accident to have been July 14, instead of August 14, 1913.' The second, merely stated an additional cause of the wreck, and repeated the causes named in the original. There was no inconsistency in these amendments, which were regularly allowed by the district court.

When an amendment to a petition is allowed, it relates back to the filing of the suit; and the cause of action, when it is the same, is not prescribed, unless it was prescribed at the time the suit was filed. Roberts v. Leak, 108 Ga. 806, 33 S. E. 995; Southern Ry. Co. v. Horine, 121 Ga. 386, 49 S. E. 285; Belden v. Barker, 124 Mich. 667, 83 N. W. 616; Liebold v. Green, 69 Ill. App. 527; Illinois Central R. Co. v. Souders, 178 Ill. 585, 53 N. E. 408; Illinois Central R. Co. v. Souders (1898) 79 Ill. App. 41, judgment affirmed Chicago Ry. Co. v. McMeen (1902) 102 Ill. App. 318; Chicago City Ry. Co. v. McMeen, 206 Ill. 108, 68 N. E. 1093; Am. Dig. (Dec.) vo. Limitation of Actions, No. 127.

Defendant answered admitting the derailment of its train and alleged that the train was going at the rate of only 15 miles an hour; that the wreck was caused by the breaking of a journal of a freight car belonging to the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company; that the arch bar of that car dropped, causing the derailment after moving a distance of several hundred yards; that the car had been well constructed, and had been properly inspected before it became a part of defendant’s train; and that the accident was unavoidable. It further answered denying that plaintiff had suffered a hernia, and that, if he did, he had failed to minimize the damage by resorting to an operation.

The evidence is very conflicting as to the condition of the roadbed of defendant at the place of the wreck, which is a branch road between Winnfield, in Winn parish, and Verda, in Grant parish. Plaintiff’s witnesses testify that it was in a very bad condition, while defendant’s witnesses testify to the contrary.

On cross-examination, the superintendent of track of defendant testified, in part:

“No, sir; I would not call it a good road. Not a first-class road. They were not supposed to run over it as a first-class road. The road was about the same average track as a majority of the new roads that have been built in the state.”

The section foreman of defendant, on cross-examination, testified, in part, as follows:

“Q. This road is nothing like the main line of the Louisiana Railroad & Navigation Company, is it? A. It is not supposed to be, as there is nothing to make it except dirt. I mean it has not been graveled. Q. It is not supposed to be kept in the same condition as the main line? A. I mean that a man cannot keep it up with nothing but dirt to build it with. Q. You do not mean to say that this road is smooth and level like the ordinary railroad? A. Yes, sir ; it was fairly smooth, about as good as ordinary dirt roads. Q. What do you call an ordinary dirt road? A. A road where you depend upon the dirt for filling in the roadbed and tamping up the ties. You see there is some places where the dirt is better than others. Where you strike a gravel country, the road will build up fairly good, and then, where you strike a clay or gumbo streak, it is hard to make the track stand up. Taking it as a whole, this track was fairly good. Q. Is it not a fact that during the year of 1913 this road was in a rotten condition? A. There were places on it that were.”

The engineer of the train said:

“There are always some few bad places on a road like this.”

The testimony is also contradictory as to the speed of the train. Plaintiff’s witnesses testify that it was moving very rapidly, while defendant’s train crew say that it was gliding along at about 10 to 15 miles an hour.

The testimony of the latter would seem to be more reasonable in view of the fact that the stopping places of the train on either side of the wreck were only about 2 miles apart. But the road was on a downgrade, the tracks were slippery because of rain, and the train was a heavy one.

[1023]*1023The preponderance of evidence supports the allegations of plaintiff that the roadbed was in' bad condition, and the train was moving too rapidly over such a track for safety; that several cars became derailed because of these conditions; that the wreck ensued; and that plaintiff was injured through the fault of defendant.

The breaking of an axle' and the falling of arch bars may have contributed to the wreck; but it does not appear to have been the originating cause, as alleged by defendant. The jolting of the cars over ties and a bad dirt roadbed doubtless caused the axle to break.

The section foreman testified that the cars left the track before the axle broke, and that the arch bars dropped and tore up the track, which caused one car to block the track and precipitate the wreck. He says, in part, in answer to questions on cross-examination:

“Q. As a matter of fact, was not the track, and the ties and everything in general there, torn up considerably by this wreck? A. There was a good deal of damage done. Q. About how many ties were injured? A. I hardly know. We put in several. The cars ran a considerable distance on the ties before they began to damage them badly. It ran a little distance before it began to break the ties. When the journal dropped, it began breaking the ends of the ties off. Q. Then as a matter of fact, after this axle dropped down, the train ran for several feet knocking up things in general along there; did it not? A. Yes, sir; it must have run seven or eight rail lengths. Q. Was it not cutting off the ends of the ties all along there? A.

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Bluebook (online)
74 So. 538, 140 La. 1019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynes-v-louisiana-ry-nav-co-la-1917.