Little Rock & Fort Smith Ry. Co. v. Cavenesse

48 Ark. 106
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 48 Ark. 106 (Little Rock & Fort Smith Ry. Co. v. Cavenesse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Little Rock & Fort Smith Ry. Co. v. Cavenesse, 48 Ark. 106 (Ark. 1886).

Opinion

Battle, J.

On the 2d day of November, 1883, in the town of Argenta, in this state, Jonathan H. Cavenesse was killed by the locomotive and cars of the Little Rock and Fort Smith.Railway company. His adminstratrix brought this action against the railroad company to recover the damages suffered by reason of his death.

A terminus of the defendant’s railroad is in Argenta. Its passenger platform, waiting-rooms and ticket office at this place are on the west side of. its track, and its baggage platform is immediately opposite and on the east side. The passenger platform is spacious, twenty feet wide, and is on a level with the top of the rail. The baggage platform is three feet high, and three feet from the rail, so near that a car could not pass a man of the deceased’s size standing between it and the railroad track. It is built on blocks and'is open at the sides. There is an incline at the northwest and northeast corners of it for persons having business on it to go on or off. On the north of it the Memphis and Little Rock railroad crosses the defendant’s track. Within the southeast angle formed by the crossing of these two roads is the baggage-platform of the defendant.

On the 2d of November, 1883, the deceased arrived at Argenta on his way to Fayetteville. He had with him a minor son. The son took a seat upon the baggage platform, while his father went to the ticket office for the purpose of purchasing tickets of defendant to Fort Smith for himself and son. He purchased the tickets and walked across the track to the baggage platform, and handed one to his son, and stopped between the baggage platform and defendant’s track for the purpose of making a memorandum in his book. While standing here, with his back partly to the railroad, a train of defendant, consisting of an engine and a tender and a caboose and cattle car, came backing down from the north side of and acrosss the Memphis and Little Rock railroad in the direction of deceased. He started across the track, but finding the train very near him, backed up against the baggage platform for it to pass. He was struck in that condition and killed by the train. Many witnesses testified that the train stopped the usual time before crossing the Memphis and Little Rock railroad, and that the usual signals of its approach were given, while others testify to the reverse. All the employes on the train, except one,' testified that they did not see him until after he was struck by the train. Witnesses differed as to the speed of the train at the time it struck him. Some testified it was running four or five miles an hour, and others from eight to twelve miles an hour.

Sherman Kirley testified in the trial that he was a brakeman on the train that killed the deceased; that the engine was turned frontward, and was pushing the caboose and cattle car, and was running about ten or twevle miles an hour when it crossed the Memphis track; that the engine blew the whistle before crossing, but did not stop; that the defendant was in the habit of sending men forward to flag its trains before crossing, but he did not know that there was a man there for that purpose at this time; that he was standing in the caboose door, about eight car lengths from Cavenesse, when he first saw him; that Cavenesse first tried to cross the track, but did not have time; that there was an employe on top of the train, but he (Kirley) did not know whether he saw Cavenesse or not; that he (Kirley) saw from Cavenesse’s motion that he could not get out of the way; that he (Kirley) gave the signal to stop three times when about five car lengths from the deceased, but did not give the signal when he first saw him'; that the engineer did not see the signal, but the fireman did; that the traip did not check up; that Cavenesse was standing leaning against the baggage platform, talking to his son, who was sitting on the platform in front of him; that when Cavenesse saw the cars were going too fast for him to step cross the track he tried to dodge under the baggage platform, but could not, and then straightened himself and leaned against the platform, with his back to it; that the steps of the caboose struck him, threw him down, and the boxing of the trucks killed him; and that the train stopped after running about five car lengths after passing him.

A. G. Cavenesse testified as follows: “Am seventeen years old and son of deceased; was sitting on baggage platform, with legs hanging down. We were waiting for train. Deceased had bought tickets and came across track and handed one to me, then turned, with his back to me, and was making memorandum of money paid for tickets; back was partly to me and to the track. The train came rolling down pretty rapidly, about ten miles an hour. I hollowed to father, ‘Look out.’ 'lie started to cross the track, but found the train was too close, and backed against platform. He was struck in that condition and killed. The train was within twenty or twenty-five feet when I first saw it. It was in fifteen feet of father when I called Ms attention to it; when he looked it was in eight or ten feet of him. The cars were even with him when he got back to platform. He could not have crossed the track. Two cars passed by him. The steps of the caboose caught him and rolled him along the edge of platform, there not being room for his body to pass. When he got to end of platform he dropped, with right leg across the rail, and engine and tender passed over it. No bell was rung or whistle blown until after engine passed him about twenty-five yards. A brakeman was on the end car; he saw father and signaled to the engineer to stop. It would not have done any good to- stop then ; the cars were too close. The cars were in twenty feet when brakeman saw him, and he signaled and went to brakes. Train did not cheek up any. It was going too fast to have been stopped. Don’t know how close platform was to train, but too close for train to ■pass a man of his size. He weighed about two hundred pounds; was very large. He could have been seen from the train about two hundred yards up the road. The platform was the one right at the crossing of the Memphis and Little Rock railroad, where baggage and passengers were put on and off both roads; good many people around, and .good deal of noise — rattling of baggage, omnibusses, etc.”

Sherman Kirley was allowed to testify, against the objection of defendant, that there had been strife between the employes of defendant and the Memphis and Little Rock Railroad company before Cavenesse was killed, and -a collision had occurred on account of it.

E. T. Mathews testified that he erected platforms for a ■railroad in Louisville, and one at Texarkana for the Iron Mountain railroad, and that the space between these platforms and the edge of the widest cars was fourteen inches. The defendant objected to this evidence because it was irrelevant. The court overruled the objection, and defendant excepted.

Other witnesses testified, but it is unnecessary to state their testimony here.

The plaintiff asked the following instructions, which were given:

“2. It is a rule, as applicable to all cases of injury about stations, that railway companies are bound to keep in a. safe condition all portions of their platforms and approaches thereto, to which the public do or would naturally resort; and all portions of their station grounds reasonably near to the platforms where passengers, or those who have purchased tickets with a view to take passage on their cars, would naturally or ordinarily be likely to go.

“ 3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Ark. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-rock-fort-smith-ry-co-v-cavenesse-ark-1886.