L. & N. Ry. v. Tracey

12 Tenn. App. 167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 6, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 167 (L. & N. Ry. v. Tracey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. & N. Ry. v. Tracey, 12 Tenn. App. 167 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The L. & N. Railroad Company, hereinafter called defendant, has appealed from two judgments rendered against it in the sum of six thousand ($6,000) dollars in favor of W. M. Tracey, administrator of Ernest L. Tracey, and four thousand ($4,000) dollars rendered against it in favor of J. M. Burgin, administrator of John Burgin. The two suits were tried at the same time to the same jury by consent.

Ernest L. Tracey and John Burgin, two young men about twenty-one years of age each, with one W. B. Cannon also a young man, lost their lives in an automobile accident when the automobile in which they were riding and was driven by Cannon, was struck by an engine pulling a long train of freight, cars on the tracks of the defendant railroad company near McGhee Station between Maryville and Madi-sonville and at a crossing where the State Highway No. 33 crosses the defendant railroad. Cannon owned a Dodge roadster car, seated next to him was Tracey and on the right side of the car was Burgin. The railroad track, at this crossing, runs nearly north and south, the highway crosses east and west. The occupants of the automobile were *169 going west, the train came from the north going smith. East of the railroad just prior to the crossing the highway runs nearly parallel with the railroad for a distance of more than one-half mile, the highway being about 270 feet east of the railroad at the one-half mile point but as the highway extends further north of this crossing and east of the railroad the distance between the railroad and highway grows greater or widens.

The declarations in the two cases are practically the same with the exception as to whom the deceased left surviving and for whose benefit the suits were instituted; Tracey’s suit being for the benefit of his widow and child while Burgin left no widow but a father and mother. There were four counts to each declaration and in each count it was alleged that the accident was caused by the joint and concurrent negligence of Gannon, the driver of the car, and of the defendant railroad company.

In the first count of these declarations, it is averred that Cannon, who had the control and management of the automobile, carelessly and negligently drove the automobile onto the grade crossing of the railroad company in front of and ahead of one of the trains of the defendant. company, which train was at the time being carelessly, recklessly and negligently operated by the agents and employees of the defendant company. There are no specific averments of negligence in this count.

In the second count of the declarations, it is averred that the defendant railroad company failed to observe the statutory precautions as set out in subsections 2 and 4 of section 1574 of Shannon’s Code. Violation of subsection 2 was abandoned upon the trial of the cases.

In the third count of the declarations, it is averred that the railroad company was negligent in failing to build and maintain a proper crossing at the place of the accident as required by sections 1593 and 1594al of Shannon’s Code.

The fourth count of the declarations is based upon common-law negligence, there being four specifications of negligence set out as follows:

(1) In running and operating its said train at an extremely rapid and dangerous rate of speed near and over said dangerous public road crossing.
(2) In failing to sound the bell or whistle or give any other proper notice of the approach of said train to said road crossing.
(3) In failing to make' proper effort to warn the driver and occupants of said automobile of their dangerous position on or n$ar the railway tracks of the defendant company.
(4) In failing to exercise a proper degree of care, diligence and caution to avoid striking said automobile and killing said Ernest L. Tracey 'and John Burgin after the position of danger *170 of said automobile and its occupants was discovered or should have been discovered by the defendant company or its employees.

The defendant filed pleas of not guilty in each case. The accident occurred on thé 27th day of October, 1926, the cause was submitted for trial at the February Term, 1928 in the Circuit Court of Blount county. Upon the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony there was a motion for a directed verdict on all the counts. This motion was sustained as to the third count in each of the declarations and was overruled as to the other three counts. Upon the conclusion of all the testimony the defendant renewed its motion for a directed verdict in each case and this was overruled. After the charge of the court the jury returned separate verdicts for the amounts heretofore stated. The defendant seasonably filed its motion for a new trial containing twenty-four grounds, which motion was overruled, prayed and perfected an appeal to this court and has assigned twenty-six errors, being the same twenty-four grounds mentioned in the motion for a new trial with two additional assignments where it is insisted that the court erred in overruling, disallowing and failing to sustain the defendant’s motion for a new trial in these cases and the court erred in writing-after the defendant’s requests to charge, the statement that the requests were covered in the general charge. These assignments, 24 and 25 are overruled because the 24th assignment is too general and the 25th assignment does, not show that the defendant was prejudiced by the language endorsed on the special requests. As to the other twenty - four assignments, we will group them into four groups. In Group 1 we have the first four assignments which complain of the court not directing a verdict for the defendant. Group No. 2 includes assignments five to fifteen which complain of errors in the charge of the Court, these excerpts complained of cover twenty pages of defendant’s brief, the charge covers fifty-five pages of the transcript. We will not undertake to set out these various excerpts in full but will consider the same together in passing upon the court’s charge. Group No. 3 includes assignments sixteen to twenty-three inclusive and complain of the court’s refusal to charge eight special requests offered by the defendant and assignment No. 26 complains of the verdicts being excessive. These cases present a large record of two volumes of 700 pages. The briefs of counsel contain 150' pages. This appeal was ably argued by learned counsels for both parties and we have been furnished with splendid briefs on the questions involved on this appeal. It is insisted, first by the defendant, that whether the common law or statute applies to this particular case, was a question of law for the court, and it was error to submit such a question to the jury, and to charge the jury on both the common law and the statutory counts. The statute is merely, declaratory of the common law with the exception that contributory negligence of the injured party, *171 where the statute is violated, does not bar a recovery and the burden of proof is on the railroad company to show that it has complied with the statutory precautions.

On the day of the accident, Cannon and the two young men who were killed left Maryville about noon in Cannon’s automobile expecting to go to Florida where they hoped to find employment.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tenn. App. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-n-ry-v-tracey-tennctapp-1928.