Jacquelyn K. Greiner, by Her Next Friend, John Greiner v. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company

360 F.2d 891, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 6292
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1966
Docket15336_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 360 F.2d 891 (Jacquelyn K. Greiner, by Her Next Friend, John Greiner v. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacquelyn K. Greiner, by Her Next Friend, John Greiner v. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company, 360 F.2d 891, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 6292 (7th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

KNOCH, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought in the United States District Court to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by the minor plaintiff-appellee, Jacquelyn K. Greiner, in a collision between the automobile in which she was riding and a locomotive of the defendant-appellant, Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company, at an intersection of highway and railroad track within the city limits of Terre Haute, Indiana.

The defendant does not attempt to impute any contributory negligence to the minor plaintiff, but attributes the accident solely to the negligent operation of the automobile by its driver, the plaintiff’s deceased mother.

The cause was tried by the District Court sitting without a jury. The Court found, by resolving the disputed issues of fact, that the accident was occasioned by the action of the defendant’s switch-man who negligently motioned plaintiff's mother to drive across the main line crossing in the face of operating flasher signals when the defendant’s locomotive was actually approaching. The Court found that he then gestured to her to stop and to back up, but that she was unable to do so. This appeal is taken from *893 judgment entered for the plaintiff. The defendant contends that errors were made in ruling on the evidence, that the findings and judgment are contrary to the physical evidence, that the conclusions and judgment are contrary to the law and the evidence and that the District Judge included an improper element in assessing damages.

The plaintiff’s mother drove toward the tracks from the northwest on Lock-port Road at about forty miles per hour, according to the testimony of Kenneth Kisner who was driving an automobile immediately ahead of her. The train was coming from the south on the westerly track or main line. Mr. Kisner stopped at the crossing. The plaintiff’s car stopped behind him. The flasher lights were operating. He said that he waited about two minutes. An engine cleared the crossing on a switch track, described by Mr. Kisner as “the second track over.” A man got off the engine, and, standing between the two tracks, waved Mr. Kisner across, although the lights were still flashing. He saw the same man wave the automobile behind him across, and saw that automobile move forward five or six feet. Then Mr. Kis-ner saw the train coming from the south on the main or west line and, in his rear view mirror, saw the man gesture to the car behind him to back up. He did not see or hear the impact and did not know of the collision until he had gone about two blocks, had turned back, had seen the commotion at the railway crossing, had returned and found that the car behind him had been involved in a collision with the train.

The man who got off the engine which cleared the crossing and who waved Mr. Kisner across was Oliver B. Perrill, the defendant’s switchman. He testified that he motioned only the first car to cross while the lights were off for a second or two as a result of his engine having cleared the crossing; that they came on again when tripped by the approach of the train coming from the south; that he then gestured to the plaintiff’s automobile which was coming up the road about 50 yards away from him when he first saw it. He said he directed it to stop, and then to back up because it had stopped too close to the tracks, that the driver instead of backing up as directed had jumped forward about three feet onto the center of the track, and a woman got out of the driver’s side of the car as the train approached from 800 to 1000 feet south of the crossing, with its locomotive whistle sounding. As far as Mr. Perrill could tell, the woman was trying to get the children out of the automobile.

Thomas William Robinson, the engineer of the approaching train, testified that his whistle was blowing for the crossing and his engine bell was ringing continuously. He saw the plaintiff’s car approach the crossing, stop two or two and one-half feet west of the track and then as he started to apply the brake, the automobile jumped onto the crossing with its front wheels in the center of the track just as he was about 1000 feet south of the crossing. He saw a woman standing beside the car just before the impact. He saw no signals given by the switch-man to the driver.

The fireman, Ronald Larry Stemely, testified that the locomotive was about 1400 feet from the crossing when he saw the automobile stop two and one-half feet from the west rail and then lunge forward five or six feet to the middle of the track. He also testified that he saw a woman get out of the car, and that he had seen Switchman Perrill motioning the driver of the car to stop.

The head brakeman, Robert Siddall, also testified that he saw the automobile close to the track and then on the track. He saw no other automobile at all.

The defendant argues that the testimony of the witnesses, and the photographs of the site all show that the sound and visual signals of the train and the crossing were in operation, and that the switchman did not motion the plaintiff’s car across, but on the contrary gestured to it to stop and to back up.

Much is made of the descriptions of gestures in the testimony of Mr. Kisner. At one point, the court described for the *894 record Mr. Kisner’s imitation of the manner in which the switchman was using his hands. The Court said:

Let the record .show that the witness held his hands up above his head with the palms facing away from him, with a movement of the hands going back and forth above the head, motion for oncoming travel.

The defendant argues that holding the palms out is clearly a signal to stop, and that Mr. Kisner’s testimony corroborates that of the switchman who denied waving the plaintiff’s automobile forward. The argument however, loses its force when the quotation above is placed in context.

Q. Will you show the Court, by motions, what the switchman did— Strike that — what the man who got off the engine did when he motioned you across:
A. (Gesturing.) Like that.
Q. And what did he do when he motioned the Olds behind you—
The Court: Let the record show that the witness held his hands up above his head with the palms facing away from him, with a movement of the hands going back and forth above the head, motion for oncoming travel.
Q. (By Mr. Hicks.) What was the motion which you saw him give the car behind you:
A. He — come on around like that,— (gesturing).
The Court: Do that again.
The Witness: I was in the middle
of the track and he went like this, motioning -for her to come on across.
The Court: With one hand for her.
The Witness: Yes.
The Court: All right.

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360 F.2d 891, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 6292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacquelyn-k-greiner-by-her-next-friend-john-greiner-v-chicago-and-ca7-1966.