Holt v. Thompson

115 F.2d 1013, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3052
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1940
DocketNo. 2117
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 115 F.2d 1013 (Holt v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holt v. Thompson, 115 F.2d 1013, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3052 (10th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

MURRAH, Circuit Judge.

This is an action by the appellant, Jessie F. Holt, against Guy A. Thompson, trustee for the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, to recover damages for personal injuries.

At the conclusion of the appellant’s evidence, the trial court directed a verdict for appellee and from this judgment appellant appeals.

The evidence developed the following facts: Highway 62 leads from Muskogee, Oklahoma, through the City of Fort Gibson (population 1,200), and is one of the main arteries of travel in Northeastern Oklahoma. Appellee maintains and operates a railroad through the City of Fort Gibson, which intersects Highway 62 at right angles about one block from the center of the City.

Between 12 and 1 A. M., on September 23, 1938, the appellee’s train of freight cars had either stopped or was slowly moving across the highway at the point of intersection. The appellant was a passenger in a 1938 Ford V-8 truck, driven by one C. C. Norwood, in which there were two other passengers, all in the front seat. The truck was traveling in a westerly direction, slightly down grade toward the intersection, between 35 and 45 miles per hour. The appellant was sitting on the lap of another passenger, with her back toward the side door. The truck proceeded through the city of Fort Gibson, and to a point of intersection of the railroad and highway, where it crashed into the train of cars, striking between a black coal car and a black tank car. No one in the truck saw the train nor was the speed of the truck slackened on approaching the crossing. The driver testified that he “just looked down the highway and could see the lights all the way through and could not see the train.” The driver of the car was familiar with the crossing, having passed over it a good many times.

There was a street light about one hundred feet east of the intersection, which burns all night and was burning at the time of the accident. The street light was 12 to 15 feet above the surface of the ground and' between the curb and the sidewalk. There was a standard railroad sign at the crossing and other reflector type signs at the side of the pavement, which indicated the crossing.

As the truck moved toward the intersection it was observed by the night watchman of Fort Gibson, who flashed his light in front of the car to warn of the approaching danger but it did not attract the attention of the occupants of the car. No brakeman or night watchman was employed at the intersection nor was there any crossing bells or warning signals, except as hereinabove stated.

It is the contention of the appellant that the presence of the street light, at the [1015]*1015place described, tended to obscure the vision of the driver of an automobile approaching the railroad crossing at this point because the street light decreased the visibility of one approaching it, especially if the objects on the railroad track are dark so as to prevent or decrease reflection.

The testimony of an illumination engineer tended to support this contention. He testified in substance that light from an automobile when brought in cross rays with a street light of this character would not reflect objects, especially dark objects just beyond the arc of light shed by the street light; that the efficiency of the automobile lights would be impaired until the lights of the automobile were within 12 or 15 feet of the street light, which when translated into distance would mean that the vision of the driver of the truck was not obscured when he was approximately one hundred feet from the track.

The night watchman, also, testified that lights from an automobile will reflect oh the cars of a train for almost a block, if one is looking carefully.

The appellant contends that under the prevailing circumstances an unsafe and hazardous condition was created, of which the railroad company should have known, and given warning of its presence and its failure to do so was a breach of ordinary care.

Under the Oklahoma law, the presence of a railroad train, or cars, on a crossing is sufficient notice to the driver of a vehicle on the highway of such obstruction and in the absence of unusual circumstances the railroad company is not under duty to provide any other notice or warning.1

The question, therefore, under the facts is whether or not the prevailing circumstances created a peculiar and unusual ■condition, which imposed a duty on the railroad company to give a warning or signal of the presence of the cars on the railroad track at this time, and place, in ■order to constitute primary negligence.

It is urged that the facts and law in this case are controlled by the rule announced in the Smith Construction Company v. Brumley case, supra, in which this court adhered to the general rule prevailing in Oklahoma, but in the Smith Construction Company case the Court was dealing with a crossing whereat it was shown that the light extending down . the railroad .tracks from the rear of. a locomotive engine and reflecting upon a dark car could have created such an unusual or peculiar condition as to take such facts out of the general rule and impose upon the railroad company the duty to give additional warning, and which facts presented a jury question.

The facts in the Smith Construction Company case are clearly distinguishable. There the railroad company maintained the light which reflected across the intersection. The crossing was an abandoned crossing and it was generally known that no trains traveled thereon. The train involved in the accident was a work train, making a casual crossing, and the plaintiff in the suit had knowledge of the abandonment of the track and relied thereon In the instant case the street light was maintained by the city of Fort Gibson, at this point, for the protection and the safety of the public, which included those traveling through the city at night time.

Aside from what was said in the Smith Construction Company v. Brumley case, supra, the facts and law in this case are controlled by the very recent case of Kurn v. Jones, supra [101 P.2d 243], wherein it is stated: “ ‘To charge railroad with negligence in leaving train at night across highway without lights or other signals to disclose its presence, motorist injured must show that trainmen, exercising reasonable care, should know that, because of darkness,2 cars were such obstruction that people traveling in automobiles properly equipped with lights and carefully operated at reasonable rate of speed would be likely to come into collision with them.’ The burden in such case is upon plaintiff to establish a set of circumstances that would warrant the jury’s consideration of the question of reasonable care on the part of the trainmen. If the court is of the opinion that reasonable men might differ as to whether the trainmen in the exercise of reasonable care might have anticipated the accident, then the jury should be allowed to decide the questions of primary negligence and of proximate cause.”

[1016]*1016The railroad company had the legal right to block the crossing in order to permit the passage of its cars over the intersection. The plaintiff had no legal right to presume that the track was clear.

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Bluebook (online)
115 F.2d 1013, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-thompson-ca10-1940.