Missouri Pacific R.R. Co. Thompson, Trustee v. Reed

165 S.W.2d 364, 204 Ark. 846, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 26, 1942
Docket4-6845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 364 (Missouri Pacific R.R. Co. Thompson, Trustee v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pacific R.R. Co. Thompson, Trustee v. Reed, 165 S.W.2d 364, 204 Ark. 846, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 256 (Ark. 1942).

Opinion

Gtreenhaw, J.

Appellee brought this action against the trustee in bankruptcy of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and H. C. Crawley and Earl Holloway, the engineer and fireman respectively in charge of the engine of a freight train, to recover damages for personal injuries he alleges he sustained about 1:30 p. m. March 29, 1941, as a result of a collision between the automobile he was driving and said freight train at the Missouri Pacific crossing on Main street in the town of Muldrow, Oklahoma.

Appellee, among other things, alleged that he was a citizen and resident of the state of Oklahoma, and was driving his automobile in a southerly direction, and that in approaching the crossing his view of a train approaching from the west was obstructed on account of a building and obstacles along the track; that defendants, Crawley and Holloway, in approaching the crossing operated their train at a negligent rate of speed through the town of Muldrow and negligently failed to ring a bell or sound a whistle or give any signal or warning of the approach of the train, and that they negligently failed to exercise ordinary and reasonable care to maintain a lookout for persons or property as the train approached the crossing; that after discovering plaintiff upon or approaching the crossing they negligently failed to exercise ordinary care to avoid striking the automobile or warn plaintiff.

Appellants filed an answer denying the allegations of the complaint, and further stated that if plaintiff was injured as alleged, such injuries were a result of his own contributory negligence in failing to exercise ordinary care for his own safety, failing to keep a lookout, failing to stop, look and listen at a railroad crossing although he knew or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known of the approach of the train, and that he carelessly and negligently drove his automobile onto the track in front of the train, and further pleaded that plaintiff’s injuries were caused proximately and directly by his own negligence and want of care.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee for $15,000, upon which judgment was entered and from which is this appeal.

Appellants contend that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for them for the reason that the undisputed evidence shows that appellee’s own negligence was the proximate cause of his injuries, and even if there was evidence of negligence on the part of appellants, the undisputed evidence shows that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, thus barring his right to recover, and that there was no evidence of a substantial nature which tended to show any negligence on the part of appellants proximately causing appellee’s injuries.

The evidence showed that the tracks of the railroad ran east and west through the town of Muldrow, and that Main street ran north and south. Appellee was in his automobile on the north side of the track and had started on a business errand to a point on the south side of the track. He testified that he was driving the automobile at about 15 miles per hour, and when he reached a rough place in the street, about 30 feet north of the railroad crossing, he slowed down and looked and listened for a train. He first looked to the west as far as he could see, to the section house, and did not see or hear a train, and then looked back east, shifted gears and started across the tracks, looking to the left, or east, for the reason that the depot was on the north side of the track and east of th§ crossing, and obstructed his vision to the east.

He continued to look to the east until he was practically on the track, and then looked forward, and about that time, when he had almost finished crossing the track, he heard a whistle and his automobile was struck by a freight train coming from the west, resulting in the collision and serious injuries to him.

He further testified that the section house, which was located about 450 feet west of the Main street crossing facing the railroad, and the trees in front of it obstructed his vision in that direction, and that one had to be practically on the track before he could see any further than the section house. The first warning he had that there was a train from the west was when the whistle blew at a time when the train was so close he could not get off the track in time to avoid being struck, at which time the train was about the same distance from him as the length of the court room. The whistle was not sounded nor the bell rung before. His hearing was not deficient before the collision, and he was in good health'and 34 years of age and making from $72 to $80 per week as a carpenter.

Barto McConnell testified that he was on Main street, about 60 feet north of the crossing, at the time of the collision. Just before the car got to the crossing there is a rough place and the car slowed up, practically stopped, and the driver apparently threw the car into second gear and eased onto the crossing, and by that time he discovered the train. It looked like the car was about half way across the track when the train struck it. Witness heard no signal or noise indicating the approach of the train until the train whistled about the time it struck the automobile. It did not whistle or sound its bell before that time, and if the whistle were blown or the bell rung about a quarter of a mile from the crossing he did not hear it. The street where the collision occurred was the main street of Muldrow and there were business houses on both sides of the track, and there is a section house and a tool house and some trees in the yard west of the crossing which might obstruct the vision of one approaching the crossing from the north.

Bill Jones testified that he was about 100 yards southeast of the crossing at the time of the collision; that in his best judgment the whistle was' not blown or the bell rung.

Alex Yaughan testified that he was at his home, about a mile north of Muldrow, on this occasion, and saw the train proceeding east in the direction of the Main street crossing, but did not see the collision. He went in the house when the train was near the crossing in question, but he watched the train from the time it crossed a trestle until shortly before it entered the Main street crossing. “Q. How great a distance had the train traveled from the trestle until it got to the crossing where the accident happened? A. Approximately a mile. Q. Did it ever blow that whistle in that mile? A. Not until after it passed the section house, I know. Q. Was it ringing the bell during any of that time? A. Not that I know of, it was too far away for that, of course, but I know it did not blow the whistle.”

Morgan Newman, a justice of the peace, testified that at the time, of the collision he was one block south of the crossing on Main street, and that he did not hear the train whistle or the bell ring before the crash; that west of tlie Main street crossing within the city limits there are two more railroad crossings, and he did not hear the whistle nor the hell sound for any of these crossings. The section house was about a block west of the Main street crossing, and the vision of one approaching the crossing from the north is obstructed by the section house, trees and tool house until he gets on the railroad.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 364, 204 Ark. 846, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-rr-co-thompson-trustee-v-reed-ark-1942.