Lowenthal v. Vicksburg, S. & P. Ry. Co.

42 So. 483, 117 La. 1007, 1906 La. LEXIS 811
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 26, 1906
DocketNo. 15,908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 So. 483 (Lowenthal v. Vicksburg, S. & P. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowenthal v. Vicksburg, S. & P. Ry. Co., 42 So. 483, 117 La. 1007, 1906 La. LEXIS 811 (La. 1906).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

This suit was instituted against the defendant by plaintiff to recover the sum of $10,000 for injuries suffered by plaintiff, owing, as she avers, to the fault and negligence of defendant.

Plaintiff and her husband, on their way to Vicksburg, Miss., were passengers on defendant’s road.

On leaving Shreveport, they took their seats in the day coach, part of one of defendant’s fast trains.

This was in the afternoon about 3 o’clock. Within a short time after they had left the city of Shreveport, while they were passing the town of Haughton, at a high rate of speed, the front wheels of the train derailed, and the train was thereby wrecked.

Petitioner was thrown violently against the seats, and in the jostle suffered injuries.

Before the accident she was a healthy woman, strong, stoiit, did her cooking and housework. After the accident she became thin, [1009]*1009emaciated, unable to work, and required the frequent visits of her physician.

Her disease was diagnosed as being traumatic neurasthenia.

It appears that one of the wheels of the train was cracked. The wheel broke in two pieces while the train was under headway, and part of the train left the track.

Defendant does not admit the fault' and negligence charged. It sought to sustain its defense by urging that thé wheels of the train were manufactured by a reputable and experienced company; that these wheels were manufactured of material of average quality; that the construction was good; that an inspection had been made at Shreveport before the train left that place on the ■day of the accident; that the conductor in whose charge the train was, and the engineer, as defendant’s agents, were capable and intelligent workmen.

The train in question consisted of seven coaches, besides the engine and tender. The dining car was in the rear, the Pullman next, and the ladies’ coach next.

Plaintiff was a passenger in the ladies’ coach. The train was running at about 45 miles an hour at the time of the accident.

The baggage car and the mail car were badly damaged. In the mail car two clerks were killed. The combination car was next. In it were a number of negroes, several of whom were bruised. The smoker was occupied by a number of passengers. It also left the track, but no one in this car was injured. The ladies’ ear did not leave the track, and was not damaged, neither was the sleeper, nor the dining car in the rear.

The plaintiff testified that she was sitting in the ladies’ car at the moment of the accident, that she does not know what struck her. She recalled that two men helped her to return to her feet after she had fallen forward against the seat in front of her. She was very much agitated, and did not know that she was hurt She states that the cushion on which she was sitting was pressed back. It was at that moment that two men pulled her back.

There were two physicians present, one in the employ of the defendant road, for the purpose of administering relief. She sought the advice of neither.

She remained until about 11 o’.elock the night after the accident, and then left for Vicksburg, occupying a seat in the day coach, arriving at Vicksburg the following morning, and during this time she did not mention that she was hurt in the wreck or ask for relief. The day after she arrived in Vicksburg she called on a physician, who prescribed for her, but made no physical examination, and did not treat her for physical injuries.

After remaining one week at Vicksburg with her friends, she returned to her home in Marshal, Tex., occupying a seat in the day coach the entire distance.

To return to the accident and its cause, and the extent of plaintiff’s injuries:

The witnesses for the defendant testified that there was no extraordinary shock felt in the car in which plaintiff was a passen.ger at the time of the accident. There are circumstances which point to the contrary. It was made known by the testimony that strong men, accustomed to ride in railroad coaches, braced themselves against the sides of seats to meet the shock caused by the derailment.

Defendant admits that the broken wheel was the cause of the accident, and that is about all that is admitted on its part.

With reference to the defects in the broken wheel — if there were defects, as stated— its ’ contention is that they were not visible and discernible with the naked eye; that a close examination had been made of the wheels, just before the train left Shreveport; and that the lesion in the wheel was not visible by proper inspection.

' That was the opinion expressed by defend[1011]*1011ant’s master mechanic. He testified, substantially, that on examination a short time after the accident he discovered that the old crack in the wheel was fine, exceedingly fine, extending about two inches from the center of the outside of the wheel; that it was not at all apparent. He compared it to a mere hair. .

There can be no question that the examination and inspection of the wheels of cars is a matter of the greatest importance. And it must be further said that, when a carrier of passengers sets up as a defense that a defect could not be discovered, it devolves upon it to prove that fact. It has the onus of proof. It should prove that the train was in good running order, and that, if there was anything out of order, it was not visible.

But the defendant did not sustain that defense. It did not succeed in proving that the fissures in the wheels were mere invisible lines.

This wreck took place just outside of the village of Haughton. A number of persons from the village repaired to the scene of the wreck. Among them were two blacksmiths, men accustomed to handle iron and to work it into different shapes. They saw the wheel. They found old cracks in the wheel measuring from 4 to 6 inches long on both sides of the axle. The wheel was broken in two equal parts, following the lines of the old cracks, and continuing on to the rim of the wheel. They said that they could see where the old cracks ended, and where the new break began. Accustomed to handle iron and steel, they testified in a direct and positive manner.

One of these blacksmiths had been nettled by the assertion of some one in his village that no one could tell an old break from a new break in iron. He said he could, and went to the trouble of procuring a small piece of iron to prove his assertion.

As a witness in court, he produced a piece of iron he had brought with him' in his pocket for the occasion, in which there was a new" and an old break.

The cross-examination, properly enough, made close inquiry regarding his statements- and mildly reminded him that possibly the spirited controversy in which he had engaged? in his village, regarding old and new breaks, prompted him to entertain exaggerated ideas-upon the subject. 1-Ie was asked about metallurgy, and asked ^regarding his knowledge or-want of knowledge in that respect. It did? not disconcert him. He replied that he had? read some books on blacksmithing.

1-Ie held on to his theory and became slightly fraternal, though firm in the views he expressed. In answer to a question regarding-his knowledge, he said:

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Bluebook (online)
42 So. 483, 117 La. 1007, 1906 La. LEXIS 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowenthal-v-vicksburg-s-p-ry-co-la-1906.