Justice v. CSX Transportation, Inc.

908 F.2d 119, 1990 WL 94000
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 1990
DocketNos. 89-2360, 89-2426
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 908 F.2d 119 (Justice v. CSX Transportation, Inc.) 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
Justice v. CSX Transportation, Inc., 908 F.2d 119, 1990 WL 94000 (7th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

The widow of a man killed at a railroad crossing in Indiana appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant Jasper County Farm Bureau entered on the farm bureau’s motion for summary judgment. The basis of federal jurisdiction is diversity of citizenship, and the parties agree that Indiana law governs the substantive issues. There were two other defendants in the district court (CSX and Amtrak), and although they settled with the estate they, too, are attempting to appeal from the judgment in favor of the Farm Bureau. We shall have to decide whether we' have jurisdiction of their appeal before we can reach the merits of that appeal. But we begin with Mrs. Justice’s appeal.

The scene of the accident is shown in the photograph at the end of this opinion. A county road, horizontal in the picture, crosses a pair of tracks, vertical in the picture. The track on the left as you face the picture is a main line owned and maintained by defendant CSX (the old Chesapeake & Ohio). A few feet to the right of the main line is a spur servicing the large building to its right, a fertilizer plant owned by the farm bureau. At each end of the crossing is the standard flashing-light railroad warning signal, but there are no gates. On a winter afternoon in 1987, Hal Justice, a truck driver who had just delivered a load of grain to another building in the farm bureau’s complex, was driving west (left) on the county road toward the crossing. The farm bureau had placed several railroad cars on the spur within fifty feet of the crossing, and the combination of the plant and the cars blocked the view of the main line to anyone approaching the crossing from the east (right), as Justice was. The lights of the warning signal were flashing as he approached, however, and he stopped; but not seeing a train on the main track, he proceeded forward (slowly, according to eyewitnesses) across the tracks. As he entered the main track, his truck was struck by a train operated by Amtrak, the third defendant, traveling south at high speed. Justice died without regaining consciousness.

The theory of the estate’s action against the farm bureau is that the bureau had a duty not to obstruct the view of persons using the county road. The district judge held that there was no such duty, and, the bureau adds on appeal, in any event the obstruction was not the “proximate cause” of the accident—Justice’s action in crossing the track in the face of the flashing warning signal was. The bureau does not argue, however, that Justice’s contributory negligence is a bar to this suit. Under Indiana’s comparative negligence statute, the victim’s negligence is a bar only if he was more than 50 percent at fault, Ind. Code § 34-4-83-4, and the bureau does not argue that this determination can be made on the record that was before the district judge in this summary judgment proceeding. Another consideration is that the fault of all tortfeasors must be considered in determining whether the plaintiff was more than 50 percent at fault, § 34-4-33-4(b), and there were three alleged tortfeasors here, the farm bureau and the two railroads. The district judge, moreover, did not address the issue of comparative negligence.

The principal issue before us therefore is the tort duty of a land occupier to persons using an adjacent public way. The farm bureau concedes as it must that if it obstructs the way physically, it is liable to a user injured as a result of the obstruction. Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts 388 (5th ed. 1984). But it denies that it is liable for merely obstructing the line of sight across its own land. It even concedes liability to users of the public way for indirect physical obstruction, as where the owner of a commercial property, by negligent design of the entrance to the public way from his property, precipitates an accident between an employee or customer and a third party, and the third party sues the owner. Holiday Rambler Corp. v. Gessinger, 541 N.E.2d 559 (Ind.App.1989), was such a case, and held that the [122]*122landowner had a duty of care. Id. at 562. As the farm bureau points out, however, in such a case the employee or customer may be regarded as a physical projection or emanation from the property, much as if the owner had dumped his garbage in the public way. There is no physical intrusion into the public way when the property owner merely blocks a view across his property, so if Justice’s contention were accepted it could mean that tort law imposes height and set-back restrictions on private buildings located at intersections, as the bureau’s fertilizer plant is. Since the American common law has rejected the English doctrine of “ancient lights,” there is no duty to avoid building on your property in such a way as to cut off a neighbor’s access to natural light. Wolf v. Forcum, 130 Ind.App. 10, 16, 161 N.E.2d 175, 178 (1959); Mohr v. Midas Realty Co., 431 N.W.2d 380, 382 (Ia.1988); Infinity Broadcasting Corp. v. Prudential Ins. Co., 869 F.2d 1073, 1076-77 (7th Cir.1989). (We have found only one exception, and that a limited one: a decision in Wisconsin involving blockage of sunlight needed for a solar heater. Prah v. Maretti, 108 Wis. 2d 223, 321 N.W.2d 182 (1982).) It has been thought to follow that there is no duty to avoid blocking someone’s view, scenic or otherwise. Wolf v. Forcum, supra, 130 Ind.App. at 16, 161 N.E.2d at 178; Scharlack v. Gulf Oil Corp., 368 S.W.2d 705 (Tex.Civ.App.1963).

It is true that, having just made a delivery to the farm bureau, Justice was a business invitee, and let us assume that this status persisted to the time and place of the accident. Still, a business invitee is not entitled to a higher standard of care than a stranger. The point of the classification, rather, is that invitees are entitled to the same standard of care as strangers, and hence to a higher standard than social guests, (other) licensees, and trespassers. Blake v. Dunn Farms, Inc., 274 Ind. 560, 567, 413 N.E.2d 560, 564 (1980); Martin v. Shea, 463 N.E.2d 1092 (Ind.1984); Hutchins v. Norfolk & Western Ry., 890 F.2d 978, 980 (7th Cir.1989) (applying Indiana law). The farm bureau argues not that Justice had no greater entitlement than a licensee, but that it has no duty to avoid obstructing the view across its own land for anyone.

The question whether a landowner has a tort duty to prevent visual obstructions on his property to the user of a public way is one of Indiana common law. Unfortunately there are no Indiana cases on point, the analogous Indiana cases that the parties cite are all over the lot, and the case law elsewhere is sparse and divided. Mrs. Justice relies heavily on Pitcairn v. Whiteside, 109 Ind.App.

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908 F.2d 119, 1990 WL 94000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/justice-v-csx-transportation-inc-ca7-1990.