Kansas, Okla. & Gulf Ry. Co. v. Jones

1932 OK 857, 17 P.2d 959, 161 Okla. 206, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 496
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 20, 1932
Docket22379
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1932 OK 857 (Kansas, Okla. & Gulf Ry. Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas, Okla. & Gulf Ry. Co. v. Jones, 1932 OK 857, 17 P.2d 959, 161 Okla. 206, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 496 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

The plaintiff sued the defendant for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained when a train of the defendant’s hit the automobile of the plaintiff which was stalled upon the defendant’s track, grounding- her action, upon alleged negligence. From a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant has appealed, alleging numerous errors.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff, before driving upon the railroad track, stopped, looked, and listened; that there was no train in sight, although the view was clear for more than 1,400 feet; and that, hearing no whistle or bell or other sound of an approaching train, she started her car in an attempt to drive across the track, but in shifting the gears the motor stopped and caused the car to stall upon the track. She testified that her hearing was good, and that if a warning had been sounded she thought she would have heard it. Several other witnesses testified, but none of them testified to any warning having been given until just as the train was coming off of a 'bridge near the crossing where the car was struck. When the car stopped the plaintiff did not look down the track, but she made two unsuccessful attempts to start the car, bending over and pulling out the choke, shifting the gears, and stepping on the starter. At that time her attention was attracted by shouts from her son and another man who were standing between her and the bridge at the door of the factory which was located along the track, from the grounds of which she had just driven. They had observed the train running upon the bridge and shouted to direct her attention to it. When she looked down the track after that the train was nearly over the bridge, the train and the bridge seeming, as she expressed it, to be coming fight at her. She waved to the operatives on the engine, made one more unsuccessful effort to start the car, then attempted to get out by the door nearer the approaching train, but that door stuck, and she slid over and was attempting to get out at the opposite door when the automobile was hit by the train and carried about 50 feet and then thrown aside, leaving her hanging out of the car with her foot caught inside. The train evidently reached the point 80 rods from the crossing, where warning should have been given by whistle or bell as provided by section 5531, C. O. S. 1021, at or near the time the plaintiff’s car became stalled upon the track, but the evidence was not definite enough to indicate whether the car was already stopped or was still in motion. The plaintiff heard no warning until the one given as the engine was coming off of the bridge, at which *208 time three or four sharp blasts of the whistle were blown, that being the first consciousness she had that a train was approaching. The near end of the bridge was 582 feet from the crossing where the car was stalled, and the other end was 898 feet from the crossing. When the train stopped the front end of the engine was about 530 feet beyond the crossing. The plaintiff testified that she had had no trouble with the car or with the doors prior to that time. There was no evidence as to the speed of the train, and no evidence as to the condition of the brakes. Nor was there any evidence as to the distance within which it could be stopped other than the fact that from- the whistling point to where it did stop was over 1,100 feet. The plaintiff testified that before she drove upon the track she also observed a wigwag signal which was equipped with an electric bell, and that the signal was not moving nor did the bell ring. That signal and bell were installed at another crossing; it was 8 feet from the edge of the crossing at highway No. 73, that highway being 382 feet from the crossing where the plaintiff’s car was stalled, so that the signal and bell were 375 feet from the crossing where her car stalled.

(1) One assignment of error is the refusal of the court to instruct the jury not to consider the evidence as to the failure of the signal and bell at highway crossing No. 73 to operate, upon the issue of the defendant’s negligence. This question depends upon whether or not the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty to warn her in that particular manner when she was approaching the tracks at, and with the intention of crossing at, another crossing. Upon this point the plaintiff, to support her contention that the defendant was under a duty to warn her by the wigwag signal and electric bell, contended first that it was installed between the highway crossing and the street crossing where she intended to cross. It was not between the crossings in the sense that it was.installed to serve both. As a matter of fact, speaking of it as between the crossing would bo misleading in a sense. It was within 7 feet of the crossing at highway No. 73, probably as near as safety would permit, and since the distance between the crossings was 382 feet, the device was 375 feet from the street crossing where the plaintiff’s car stalled.

The plaintiff, however, contends that even if such a warning would not otherwise be required at the street crossing, and even though the device may not have been installed to protect the street crossing, but only to protect at the highway crossing, yet if it could be seen and heard by those intending to cross at the street crossing and they had been educated to rely upon it, then there was a duty to them to operate it. Nothing appears that could be regarded as education of that character, all that appears being that the device was installed at the highway crossing for use there and that it was used there. In support of this contention the plaintiff cited several cases, in all but one of which the plaintiff was crossing at a street crossing where the signaling agency was stationed. In the other case, Florida, etc., Ry. Co. v. Foxworth, 41 Fla. 1, 25 So. 338, 79 Am. St. Rep. 149, the plaintiff was crossing from 10 to 50 feet away from the street crossing and the breach of duty was a failure to give a warning from the rear end of a backing train. That case is not in point, nor does it -intimate that reliance upon performance of duty to another creates a duty to the one relying upon it. That was a case where the plaintiff was crossing the main street of a village along which the track ran, not using a street crossing, but crossing from 10 to 50 feet from it. No crossing statute was involved, and the harm occurred by backing out cars with no lookout on the rear, which was the approaching end. The duty was based upon common-law principles and the whole street along which the track ran was regarded as an area of danger. In approving an instruction holding the defendant to the exercise of reasonable care after plaintiff should have been seen, and repudiating the contention that the duty arose only after he was seen, based on a contention- that he was a trespasser because he was not at the street crossing, the court held that he could cross the street where he chose and was not a trespasser, and said that there being no difference 'in the care necessary to avoid harm, the case would be governed by the principles applicable to crossing accidents. This, meant no more than that there was a duty to exercise care after he should have been seen, just as there would have been at the crossing. The language was somewhat unfortunate, but the court had already held that the defendant was under a duty to exercise care and that the plaintiff was not a trespasser, and it refused to- differentiate the measure .of duty from the standpoint of legal right to be where the plaintiff was, because there was no difference.

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Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 857, 17 P.2d 959, 161 Okla. 206, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-okla-gulf-ry-co-v-jones-okla-1932.