Henderson v. Missouri Pac. R. R.

131 So. 586, 15 La. App. 196, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 720
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 1930
DocketNo. 3910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 131 So. 586 (Henderson v. Missouri Pac. R. 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
Henderson v. Missouri Pac. R. R., 131 So. 586, 15 La. App. 196, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 720 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

On June 16, 1928, a collision took place in the daytime at a public crossing in a rural section of Morehouse parish between one of defendant’s passenger trains and an automobile in which plaintiff was riding. He was injured and prosecutes this suit to recover damages.

He alleges that he was a passenger in the automobile which at the time was owned and driven by one B. J. Greenberry and that neither he nor the driver of the car was guilty of any fault or negligence, but that the accident and resulting injury were due solely to the fault and negligence of the defendant company, the specific acts of negligence charged being: (1) That the crossing where the collision occurred was dangerous and negligently constructed in that approach to the same is up a short incline; (2) that the Louisiana stop sign at the crossing is placed in such manner as to obstruct the view of a train ap[197]*197proaching from the south; (3) that the defendant negligently permitted weeds and bushes to grow up along the right-of-way to the height of six feet so that it was impossible for one approaching the crossing to see the train on the track, and (4) that the train crew, before reaching the crossing, did not ring the bell, blow the whistle or give any other warning signal whatever.

The defendant in answer admitted that its .train collided with the car in' which plaintiff was riding and -admitted that he was injured to some extent but denied generally the other allegations, and affirmatively alleged that plaintiff, while not the driver of the car, was guilty of gross independent negligence and in the alternative pleaded contributory negligence in bar of his recovery.

The trial judge rejected plaintiff’s demands, ordered his suit dismissed, and he prosecutes this appeal.

This is a tort action founded upon negligence and if the defendant company was guilty of no negligence there can be no recovery and the burden was upon plaintiff to prove negligence on the part of defendant as a necessary element of his cause of action. This point is conceded by counsel for appellant.

The only charge of negligence against the railroad company urged by counsel for appellant in this court is that the train approached the crossing without the sound of bell or whistle. All others have been abandoned.

Act No. 12 of 1924, page 16, provides that every railroad company shall cause each locomotive engine used to be equipped with a bell and a steam whistle “and shall cause the bell to be rung or the whistle to be blown at the distance of at least three hundred yards from the place where the railroad crosses over any highway or municipal street, and the bell shall be kept ringing or the whistle shall be kept blowing continuously until said crossing is passed.” Section 1.

It goes without saying that neglect to comply with this mandatory duty on the part of the railroad company is negligence per se. But in this connection we take occasion to say that in order to comply with the requirements of the above cited act it is not necessary that the bell be rung and the whistle blown at a distance-of 300 yards from the place where the railroad crosses the highway, nor is it necessary that the bell be kept ringing and that the whistle be kept blowing continuously until the crossing is passed. The act does not so provide. All that is required by the act is that either one or the other warning signal shall be given at a distance of 300 yards from the crossing and that either the bell shall be kept ringipg or the whistle kept blowing continuously until the crossing is passed. Either warning signal suffices. Both are not necessary. This must be kept in mind in considering the testimony in this case touching the only charge of negligence now urged.

In support of his allegations that defendant’s train approached the crossing without the sound of bell or whistle, plaintiff testified that the driver of the car in which he was riding stopped it before going upon the track and that he, plaintiff, looked both ways, up and down the track, that he listened and that he neither saw nor heard the train. We readily accept as true his statement lhat he did not see or hear the train, .because if he did, it is inconceivable that he would have permitted the driver to go upon tne track immediately in front of the oncoming train as he [198]*198did without making some protest or giving some warning, and he says he did nothing and said nothing to the driver until the front wheels of the automobile had crossed the first rail of the track, at which time, the testimony shows, the train was so close that a collision was inevitable. But we cannot believe that he either looked or listened. This crossing is in a rural section where the land is level and open and the railroad track is practically straight. There is nothing of any character or description either on the right-of-way or near it within a mile of the crossing to obstruct the view. It is undisputed that one standing at or near the crossing on either side could see the railroad track either way for at least a mile. Therefore, the fact that plaintiff did not see the train until the automobile got up on the track is proof sufficient that he did not look for it until then.

Now the fact that plaintiff was mistaken or not candid when he said he looked leads readily and strongly to the conclusion that he was also mistaken when he said he listened. We think he did neither, and, therefore, attach no importance to his testimony, that the train approached without warning signals.

Plaintiff called three other witnesses in support of this allegation of negligence, James Harkness and Eugene Gray, both young white men, and Cora Hawkins, a colored woman. Harkness and Gray were both standing on the front porch of the latter’s residence which is between a half and three-quarters of a mile from the crossing where the collision took place. Harkness says the beil was not rung and that the whistle was not blown. Gray does not say that there was no bell or whistle but says he heard none. The woman, Cora Hawkins, was in a house a quarter of a mile away and says she heard the noise of the train from the time it left Collins-ton, which is two miles away, and that the whistle was not blown and the bell was not rung until the train hit dhe car.

As against the above there is the testimony of the train crew, James McCarthy, the engineer; J. M. McDonald, the fireman, and T. A. Brown, the conductor. The engineer and the fireman both say that the automatic bell ringer was turned on as the train left Collinston two miles south of the crossing and that the bell rang continuously until after the collision. The engineer in explaining why he left the bell ringing over the entire distance said that there was a private crossing on the outskirts of Collinston and that cattle grazed on the right-of-way in that vicinity. The whistle post is one-quarter of a mile from the crossing and the engineer, fireman and conductor each say that the crossing whistle was blown at or near the post.

To corroborate the testimony of the train crew defendant called four colored persons, Fred Key and his wife, Mattie, Liza Reece and George Reece. Fred Key testified that he lived about 250 yards from the crossing and was in his back yard cutting wood when the collision took place; that he heard the bell and whistle but did not see how far the train was from the crossing at the time.

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Lagrange v. Missouri Pacific R. Co.
503 So. 2d 1158 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1987)
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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 586, 15 La. App. 196, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-missouri-pac-r-r-lactapp-1930.