Louisville & N. R. v. Mayers

147 Tenn. 315
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 Tenn. 315 (Louisville & N. R. v. Mayers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & N. R. v. Mayers, 147 Tenn. 315 (Tenn. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Two actions for damages brought against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company in the circuit court of Knox county. One was brought by the plaintiff below, Flora E. Mayers, as administratrix of Lewis Prater, who was killed on March 28, 1921, in a collision between a backing train of the railroad company and an automobile truck, in which Prater was riding, to recover for his death. The other was brought by Homer Flowers, who was riding in the same truck and injured in the same collision, to recover for the injuries sustained by. him.

The declarations in each case contain three counts, and, with respect to the allegations of negligence on the part of the railroad company, the declarations are, in substance, the same. The first two counts in each declaration were based on an alleged failure of the railroad company to observe the requirements of subsection 4 of section 1574 of Shannon’s Code, and the third count in each declaration averred that defendant was guilty of negligence under the common law in several specified particulars, which negligence, it is averred, was the proximate cause of the death of Prater, and the injuries suffered by Flowers.

By consent the two cases were tried together before a jury in the circuit court.upon issues made by defendant’s plea of not guilty filed to each declaration. '

At the close of the plaintiff’s proof, the court directed a verdict for the defendant as to the common-law counts of the declarations, but at that time overruled defendant’s motion for peremptory instructions on the statutory counts.

[317]*317At the close of the evidence, both plaintiffs and defendant moved for directed verdicts in their favor. The court overruled the plaintiffs’ motions, but sustained defendant’s motion, and, -verdicts being rendered by the jury in accordance with the court’s instructions, plaintiffs’ suits were ordered dismissed. Whereupon both plaintiffs made motions for new trials, which were respectively overruled.

From the judgments of the court dismissing their suits, both plaintiffs appealed to the court of civil appeals. That court reversed the judgments of the circuit court, and the cases are now before this court upon writ of certiorari sued out by the railroad company, and for review.

The court of civil appeals was of the opinion that the trial court was in error in directing verdicts in favor of defendant in said cases, but should have sustained plaintiff’s motions for directed verdicts in their favor.

The record discloses that Lewis Prater and Homer Flowers were colored men, employed by the Aluminum Company of America, at Alcoa, in Blount county, on March 28, 1921. On that day they were riding in a large five-ton automobile truck, heavily loaded with cement and fiber plaster, and driven by their “boss,” Floyd Peterson, and as the truck was crossing the track of the defendant at a public street crossing in Alcoa it was struck by a backing train of defendant, and Prater was killed and Flowers injured. Peterson, the driver, was also killed, the truck was demolished, and defendant’s train derailed.

The collision occurred at the crossing of Hall’s road and the defendant’s railroad. Hall’s Road is a much-used .public road in the town of Alcoa. At that point, the street runs nearly north and south, and the defendant’s track runs nearly east and west, and the street crosses the [318]*318track almost at right angles. The truck was moving southward, and the train was moving eastward. The defendant’s train was backing; that is, the locomotive was at the rear of the train and was pushing the tender, four box cars and two passenger coaches ahead of it. The passenger coaches were in front, and the truck in which Prater; and Flowers were riding was struck by the end of a passenger coach. The train was not engaged in a switching movement, but, as was its custom, was backing along the main track from Armona to Maryville, through Alcoa, a distance of four or five miles. The engineer estimated the distance from his place in the cab of the locomotive to the point of contact between the coach and the truck at two hundred fifty-five feet, and the conductor estimated the distance at three hundred twenty-two feet.

The railroad is straight from the crossing westward for a distance of approximately four hundred feet, and the grade ascends slightly as the track approaches the crossing from the west. The street approaches the railroad from the north on a downgrade of about six per cent, for a distance of about two hundred feet before it reaches the railroad right of way. The street was paved with concrete to the edge of the railroad right of way, but across the right of way it was surfaced with rough, unrolled macadam, except between the rails and two or three feet on each side of the rails, where the railroad company had laid planks or timbers of some sort. At the edge of the right of way on the north side of the railroad, about forty feet from the tracks there was a “drop-off:” of two or three inches from the concrete to the macadam.

The accident occurred in the daytime, on a cloudy, rainy day, and it was raining some at the time of the collision. [319]*319The train was running at a speed of from fifteen to twenty-fiye miles an hour. The truck slowed down as it approached the edge of the concrete, and moved slowly across the macadam to the railroad track.

After the collision, the truck was pushed along the track by the train for about thirty-eight feet, when the front coach left the rails and the train ran one hundred thirty-two feet further, plowing into the embankment alongside the track before it stopped. The front wheels of the truck were under the front end of the coach when the train stopped. The remainder of the truck was thrown from the track about the time the coach was derailed.

The evidence is undisputed that the truck became an obstruction on the track in front of the train before the collision.

The court of civil appeals reversed the judgments of the circuit court upon the ground that defendant’s train, at the time of the collision, was being operated backwards, with the locomotive in the rear, which movement, on its part, rendered defendant absolutely liable for the death of Prater and the injuries to Flowers under the rule announced in Railway Co. v. Wilson, 90 Tenn., 271, 16 S. W., 613, 13 L. R. A., 364, 25 Am. St. Rep., 693, and Railroad v. Dies, 98 Tenn., 655, 41 S. W., 860.

In these cases it was held that a railroad company, by placing the locomotive in the rear of a train of moving cars, renders a compliance with the statutory precautions impossible, and for that reason its liability is absolute.

It is insisted by counsel for defendant that the. rule announced in the case of Railway Company v. Wilson, and the other case, supra, was modified by the opinion of this court in the recent case of Southern Railway Co. v. Owen, [320]*320142 Tenn., 1, 215 S. W., 270, and that under the holding of the court in that case the operation of a train backwards, or with the engine in the rear, does not necessarily fix absolute liability upon the railroad company for injuries resulting from a collision with such backing train.

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Bluebook (online)
147 Tenn. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-v-mayers-tenn-1922.