Mary Margaret Wright v. CSX Transportation

375 F.3d 1252, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 13875, 2004 WL 1475380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 2004
Docket03-13208
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 375 F.3d 1252 (Mary Margaret Wright v. CSX Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Margaret Wright v. CSX Transportation, 375 F.3d 1252, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 13875, 2004 WL 1475380 (11th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

On February 3, 2001 in Vienna, Georgia, a locomotive operated by CSX Transportation, Inc. collided with an automobile carrying a family of four, with predictably tragic results. Three of the family members were killed and the fourth, a young girl, was seriously injured. A relative of the family filed two wrongful death lawsuits against the railroad in her capacity as administrator of the estates of two of those who were killed, and another suit against it in her capacity as next friend and guardian of the surviving minor. After those three lawsuits were consolidated for trial, a jury found for CSX. This is the resulting appeal, which raises issues involving three of the district court’s jury instructions and two of its evidentiary rulings.

I.

On February 3; 2001, thirteen-year-old Jillian Wright and her twelve-year-old brother, Kevin Jr., were deposed in Albany, Georgia, in connection with a lawsuit resulting from their mother’s death in an automobile accident in 1996. Their depositions were taken because they had been passengers in the car their mother was driving at the time of the fatal accident five years earlier. That night, after the depositions had been completed, they left Albany in an automobile headed to Vienna, Georgia. Their father, Kevin, Sr., was driving, and their stepmother Vivian was in the front passenger seat. ■

At approximately 9:15 p.m. as they drove in the town, the Wright family approached the Cotton Street railroad crossing from the west. At the same time, a train operated by CSX approached from the south.

Because he had previously lived in that area, Kevin, Sr. was familiar with the roads of Vienna and with this particular crossing. The Cotton Street crossing consists of three sets of tracks. For a motor *1255 ist crossing from west to east, as the Wrights were, the third set of tracks is the main line, or the set of tracks on which most trains operate. The road over the tracks is uneven, and cars must drive over a hump to cross the main line tracks. There is no crossing arm or warning bell. Instead, there is a system that detects approaching trains and approximately thirty seconds before a train reaches the crossing begins flashing two red warning lights that are located to the side of the road just before a motorist enters the intersection.

There is a train switching area just to the south of the crossing, but motorists cannot see it because of a curve in the tracks. The Cotton Street warning system detects any train within a half-mile of the crossing and starts the warning lights flashing. If a train stops at the switching area, the system is designed to “time out” the warning lights eight seconds after the train stops moving toward Cotton Street. If, during a switching maneuver, the train makes another movement toward Cotton Street, the warning lights will flash again until the eight-second “time out” mechanism turns them off.

Before the accident occurred, Vienna Police Chief David Musselwhite had received calls about the Cotton Street warning lights flashing when no train was coming and had observed the lights flashing “many” times himself. As of February 2001, Musselwhite says that several times per month the lights would flash but no train would come. Chief Musselwhite’s office had reported these occurrences on the railroad’s toll-free phone number. Leslie Hawkins, the CSX employee responsible for maintaining many crossing signals, including Cotton Street’s, had received reports of “false positives” from some of his signals, but neither he nor CSX kept records of them. He did not remember receiving any reports of the Cotton Street signal malfunctioning in the months leading up to February 3, 2001. As a result of the ■ fact that the warning lights often flashed when no train was coming, local residents and others familiar with the crossing often drove across the tracks while the warning lights were flashing.

Further complicating the crossing situation, a warehouse owned by CSX sits on the southwest side of the tracks and partially obstructs a motorist’s view of the tracks to the south. On the night of February 3, 2001, CSX also had four tank cars parked on one of the side tracks approximately 150 feet away from the crossing to the south. It was not unusual for the railroad to park cars on the Cotton Street side tracks.

According to Jillian Wright, the only occupant of the car to survive, when her father had driven through the Cotton Street crossing on prior occasions, he had stopped before driving over the first set of tracks and then stopped again in the space between the first and second tracks before crossing the rest of the way. The “black box” computer chip in the car’s airbag system recorded that five seconds before the collision, the automobile was moving ten to eleven miles-per-hour. Two seconds before impact, it slowed to four miles-per-hour but never fully stopped until after the collision.

As the train approached the Cotton Street crossing from the south and the Wrights’ automobile drove onto the crossing from the west, conductor Robert Gibbs and engineer Butch Cuddington blew the train’s whistle. Gibbs could see that the red warning lights at the crossing were flashing. The train’s headlights were on bright as it traveled fifty-seven' miles-per-hour, which is three miles-per-hour below the federally regulated speed limit for the area. Gibbs and Cuddington saw a car cross onto the main line tracks, and Gibbs saw the woman in the front seat point at *1256 the train and turn toward the driver. At that point, Gibbs and Cuddington saw the car appear to stop directly on the tracks, and Gibbs said, “We’re fixing to wipe out a whole carload of folks.” Cuddington applied the emergency brake, but to no avail. The train collided with the Wrights’ car and finally came to a stop approximately a half-mile after the point of impact. Even before the tram came to a stop, Gibbs radioed for help.

Within moments .of the collision, Emerson Lundy, an off-duty Vienna police officer, arrived on the scene. As he and Gibbs ran to check on the car’s passengers, Gibbs said, “The guy, you know, he stopped,” and, ‘Why did he do that?” At trial, Gibbs speculated that Kevin, Sr. had panicked and slowed down to try to back off the tracks instead of moving forward.

Three of the car’s four occupants — Kevin, Sr., Kevin, Jr., and the children’s stepmother, Vivian — were declared dead on the scene. Thirteen-year-old Jilhan survived. It took an hour to get her out of the car using a “jaws of life” device. She was air-lifted to a hospital in Macon, Georgia, where treatment for her many serious injuries began. At the time of the trial in September of 2002, she was still receiving treatment for some of her physical and psychological injuries.

Four lawsuits were filed as a result of this accident. Mary Margaret Wright, the mother of Kevin, Sr., and grandmother of the two children, filed one wrongful death lawsuit in her capacity as administrator of her son’s estate, another one as administrator of her grandson’s estate, and a third lawsuit as next friend and guardian for her granddaughter. Those three lawsuits were consolidated and tried to a jury. (Another lawsuit arising from the death of the fourth occupant, Vivian Wright, settled.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Steve Anyadike v. Jonathan Kirk
Eleventh Circuit, 2024
Carter v. National Railroad Passenger
63 F. Supp. 3d 1118 (N.D. California, 2014)
Gipson v. Administrative Committee of Delta Air Lines, Inc.
350 F. App'x 389 (Eleventh Circuit, 2009)
George Lips v. City of Hollywood
350 F. App'x 328 (Eleventh Circuit, 2009)
Delta Health Group Inc. v. Royal Surplus Lines Insurance
327 F. App'x 860 (Eleventh Circuit, 2009)
Tambourine Comercio Internacional SA v. Solowsky
312 F. App'x 263 (Eleventh Circuit, 2009)
Tracye Currie v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc.
266 F. App'x 857 (Eleventh Circuit, 2008)
Jeffery Guy Long v. Raymond Corporation, The
245 F. App'x 912 (Eleventh Circuit, 2007)
Beverly Chambless v. Louisiana-Pacific Corp.
481 F.3d 1345 (Eleventh Circuit, 2007)
J. Rae Hoyer v. Don Hunter
173 F. App'x 790 (Eleventh Circuit, 2006)
Louise Cook v. Sheriff of Monroe County
402 F.3d 1092 (Eleventh Circuit, 2005)
Liboy Ex Rel. Liboy v. Rogero Ex Rel. Rogero
363 F. Supp. 2d 1332 (M.D. Florida, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
375 F.3d 1252, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 13875, 2004 WL 1475380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-margaret-wright-v-csx-transportation-ca11-2004.