McCarty v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.

194 So. 96
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1939
DocketNo. 5964.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 So. 96 (McCarty v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarty v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 194 So. 96 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff, Alfred McCarty, brought this action against the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the Yazoo & Mississippi Railroad Company for injuries allegedly sustained when plaintiff’s automobile crashed into the center piling of a trestle owned by the defendant railway companies, said trestle crossing Louisiana Highway No. 13 in Ouachita Parish.

The defendants filed an answer to the plaintiff’s petition but, before going to trial on the merits, filed exceptions of no cause or right of action. ' The case was tried on the exceptions and the lower court ruled that they were well founded and dismissed plaintiff’s suit. Plaintiff has perfected an appeal to this court.

That portion of the plaintiff’s petition at which the exceptions were directed reads as follows:

“2. Petitioner shows that said railroad companies are the owners and lessees of all the track, equipment, crossings and rights of way on their said line and track running from Monroe, Louisiana, to Shreveport, Louisiana, and more particularly that said defendants are the owners and lessees of the right of way, crossing, equipment and trestle located on Louisiana Highway No. 13, where said track crosses said highway, said crossing being at a point about one mile south of the intersection of the Highway and U. S. Highway No. 80, and being in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana.
“3. Petitioner shows that at the aforementioned point defendants maintain an overhead railroad crossing over said highway, and that said overhead crossing is of negligent construction, being supported by 18 wooden pilings in three rows of six each, one row of which is located in the center of said highway. He further shows that the distance between the center pilings and the outer ones is so narrow that there is barely room for an automobile to pass.
“4. Petitioner shows that at the point where the hereinafter described collision took place, the defendants’ railroad is constructed upon a high embankment, which said embankment is connected with the aforementioned overhead crossing. He shows that during heavy rains water drains from said embankment across Highway 13 and cuts a deep rut and ditch across the lower part of said highway, all of which is on defendants’ right of way and is well known to defendants herein; and that on or about June 14, 1938, and for several weeks prior thereto, the aforementioned rut and ditch did exist within approximately 20 feet of the first wooden pilings holding up defendants’ tracks; petitioner further represents that said rut and ditch was one which could not be seen by the driver of an automobile and constituted a trap on said highway, all of which will be more fully shown upon the trial hereof.
“5. Petitioner shows that said overhead crossing is so constructed that loose gravel accumulates against and extends approximately IS feet from the center row of pil *98 ings holding up defendants’ overhead crossing, and that this condition existed on or about June 14, 1938, and prior thereto, all of which was well known to defendant railroad companies.
“6. Petitioner shows that the above described condition of defendants’ overhead crossing, approach and right of way was due entirely to the fault and negligence of defendant; that the said existed on June 14, 1938 and prior thereto; that the same operated as a trap on said crossing, approach and right of way, all of which should have been and was well known to defendants.
“7. Petitioner shows that on or about June 14, 1938, he, accompanied by his father, Louis H. McCarty, deceased, was driving south on Louisiana Highway No. 13 in a 1934 Plymouth coupe, owned by him, at a moderate speed; that he was driving in a prudent and careful manner, maintaining a careful lookout as he approached the aforementioned crossing, and that as he proceeded toward the right hand entrance to said crossing and when he reached a point approximately 20 feet from the first piling in the center of said crossing, his front wheels struck the above described rut and ditch, which caused the left front wheel of his automobile to be thrown into the loose gravel piled about and leading from said center piling; that he attempted to get out of said loose gravel, but was unable to do so before his rear wheels struck said rut and ditch and caused him to lose complete control of his automobile and the same to be thrown against the center pilings of defendants’ crossing.” '

In order to recover under the allegations hereinbefore set out, it is necessary that there must have been an omission on the part of the railway company to perform some duty which, under the law of this state, was owed to plaintiff. Statutory law in this state covering intersections of highways and railroads is to be found in Act 157 of 1910, which reads as follows: “In all cases where railroads, tramroads, dirt or plank roads or canals shall cross any highway, the corporation shall so construct the works as not to hinder, impede or obstruct its safe and convenient use; * * *.” Section 1.

And again, regarding the duties of railroads in respect to the crossing of public highways, the legislature set out the following rule in Act 132 of 1918, Section 1: “The powers and duties of the Railroad Commission of-Louisiana are hereby added to and enlarged; and the power and authority is hereby vested in .the said Commission, and it is hereby made its duty to require the owner, possessor or operator of any railway, railroad, tram road, log road, transportation, irrigation or drainage canal, or syphon, crossing any public road already constructed or which may hereafter be constructed, to construct and maintain a suitable and convenient crossing over such public road, the said crossing to extend to the limits of the right of way, or fifty feet from the center of such railway, railroad, tram road, log road, transportation, irrigation or drainage canal or syphon, in accordance with the standard specifications furnished by the State Highway Department of the Board of State Engineers in respect to such crossings.”

It is urged on behalf of the plaintiff that the petition in question clearly sets forth a violation of a duty set out in these statutes on the part of the defendant railroads.

In regard to a possible conflict in the above statutes, it was held in the case of Brandon v. Texas & N. O. R. Company, La.App., 169 So. 254, that the second act was in fact passed in order to afford a remedy by which the Railroad Commission (now the Public Service Commission) might force railroads to perform those duties placed upon them by the first statute.

It is urged on the part of the defendants that the duty to maintain approaches to railroad crossings is limited to grade crossings. The fact that the crossing in this instance is what is commonly referred to as an “underpass”, is strongly emphasized as ground for dismissing plaintiff’s action. In support of this proposition, counsel cites Becker v. Illinois Cent. R. Company, La.App,. 147 So. 378, 379. In that case, as in this, the accident was caused by plaintiff’s automobile colliding with a center tier of piling supporting an underpass. There the similarity ends. In that case the court held that the crossing was not negligently constructed and dismissed plaintiff’s action by making the following statement:

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Related

Wallace v. Louisiana A. Ry. Co.
6 So. 2d 63 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
194 So. 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarty-v-illinois-cent-r-co-lactapp-1939.