Miller v. Baldwin

178 So. 717
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1938
DocketNo. 1801.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 178 So. 717 (Miller v. Baldwin) 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
Miller v. Baldwin, 178 So. 717 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

OTT, Judge.

Venton Miller, the twenty-one year old, unmarried son of plaintiff, was run over and killed by a west bound passenger train of the defendant railroad on the morning of February 7, 1934, at about the hour of 2:30 o’clock a. m. The deceased was struck and run over while lying on the railroad track in a drunken stupor, having lain down on the track on his way home after attending a dance, and after having lost his way in returning home, evidently because of his drunken Condition. The accident occurred a little more than a quarter of a mile west of the town of Eunice — that is west of the corporate limits of this town, between the Basile highway crossing and what is known as the Fruge crossing. The former crossing is about 1J4 miles west of the passenger station in the town of Eunice, and the latter crossing is some (1,600 feet east of the former, that is something less than a mile from the passenger station, and about a quarter of a mile from the corporate limits of the town.

Plaintiff sues for $15,000 damages. The case was tried and the testimony transcribed before the then presiding judge retired from the bench, and the succeeding judge recused himself for good cause, and appointed Hon. Seth Lewis, a member of the St. Landry Bar, as judge ad hoc, to whom the case was submitted and who rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $7,000. From this judgment, the defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff concedes that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in lying down on the track in a drunken condition, but contends that the railroad should be held liable for the death of his son on the ground that the operatives of the passenger train that killed his son w.ere guilty of negligence in running at an excessive rate of speed in a section of country that was thickly populated and where pedestrians habitually used the tracks, to the knowledge of the railroad employees, and at a point where several highways crossed the railroad in close proximity to the point where the deceased was killed. It is alleged that the railroad track is crossed by three main highways and three lane crossings between the said Basile crossing and the depot in the town of Eunice. That the train could have been stopped in time to avoid striking the deceased had the operatives been keeping a proper lookout and had. been going at a reasonable rate of speed. The answer of defendant is in the nature of a general denial of negligence, and sets up the negligence of the deceased as the cause of the accident.

The railroad track for more than a mile in both directions from the point where deceased was struck is perfectly straight, and the roadbed between the tracks or rails has gravel up even with the ties. There are some discrepancies in the testimony as to the exact point on the track where deceased was struck and the distance the body was dragged after being struck, some of the witnesses placing the *719 point at which the blood marks began near the Fruge crossing, while others place this point further west toward the Basile crossing. While this point is not of a great deal of importance, yet we think the preponderance of the evidence indicates that the deceased was lying on the track and was first struck by the train a few yards west of the Fruge crossing, and the body was dragged from 75 to 150 yards further west toward the Basile crossing. The right of way of the railroad was fenced along the tracks where the accident occurred, and cattle guards were placed at the crossings in the vicinity-

In determining the nature of the country in the vicinity of the point where the deceased was killed, and in arriving at the. degree of care required of the operatives of the train in that section with reference to trespassers on the tracks, three vital considerations enter into the case.

The first consideration is the extent to which the tracks were used by pedestrians as a footpath in going to and returning from the town of Eunice. The preponderance of the evidence is to the effect that the tracks from Basile crossing into the town of Eunice were' used very extensively and frequently by pedestrians both day and night. There were so many witnesses who testified to this fact that we can hardly disbelieve all of them without indicting the residents of almost the whole neighborhood with false swearing. While we are not in position to know the character and standing of the witnesses who testified on this point as was the judge ad hoc who decided the case below, yet we notice that among the witnesses who testified to this fact were Dr. Garland, acting coroner, Mr. Brunson, a justice of the peace, and many others, evidently leading citizens of the community. From the testimony of these witnesses, we think it can be safely concluded that at least as many as twenty or thirty people used the railroad tracks daily in going to and returning from the town of Eunice, and in fishing along the right of way. Not only did these pedestrians use the tracks during the daytime, but many persons used the tracks at night, several witnesses testifying that they themselves had been on the tracks at night and had seen others on the tracks, as late as midnight and after.

The evidence also shows beyond question that there is a well-defined and easily ■observed footpath beaten • put . along the side of the rails for a distance of a mile and a half — that is from Basile crossing into the principal part of the town of Eunice. This fact indicates fhat the. railroad was used by many pedestrians as a pathway, and had been so used for many years, and the effort of the defendant to disprove this fact is, in our opinion, both feeble and unconvincing.

The engineer of the train denied that he had ever seen any pedestrians on the track near the point where the accident occurred, notwithstanding the fact that he had been on that railroad for some twenty years or more, and had passed over the locality of the accident as engineer on a train going east at 1:48 o’clock in the afternoon and at 2:30 a. m. in the morning going west every two or three days for many years. ' He says that he has never seen any person on the tracks at night except near the depot, and admits that he has seen two or three people some days on the track nearer town than the point of the accident. The fireman, who had been on these runs for some fourteen years, even says that he had never seen a person on the tracks in the vicinity of the accident; that he had seen only a few cars crossing the Basile crossing at night. The section foreman, who had been over this section of track almost daily for several years, says that people do use the tracks to walk on in the daytime occasionally, but he does not know if they use them at night.

In view of the fact that the decided preponderance of the evidence shows that the tracks were used so frequently from the Basile crossing into town as to make a beaten path, we cannot believe that the fireman and the engineer going over this route so many times had seen no pedestrians on the track. There is no reason why they could not see the path along the side of the rails right in front of them as they propelled, their locomotives over the rails, and obviously, if people walked along this path, they saw them from the cabs of the engines.

The next point to consider is the nature of the country near the point of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-baldwin-lactapp-1938.