Newman v. Southern Railway Co.

194 S.E. 237, 57 Ga. App. 70, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 549
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 4, 1937
Docket26248, 26267
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 194 S.E. 237 (Newman v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newman v. Southern Railway Co., 194 S.E. 237, 57 Ga. App. 70, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 549 (Ga. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Stephens, P. J.

This was an action against tbe railway company, brought by tbe administratrix of W. F. Newman, under tbe [71]*71employer’s liability act of Congress of April 22, 1908, to recover damages for the homicide of the intestate. The parts of the petition which are relevant and material to the error complained of in the bill of exceptions alleged in substance as 'follows: The decedent was employed by the defendant as a section foreman. On November 20, 1935, at a point about two miles north of the City of Jackson in Butts County on the defendant’s line, the decedent was killed when a north-bound freight-train collided with a handcar, which, as well as the decedent, was then engaged in interstate commerce, and his death was caused by the negligence of the defendant. The decedent and four men working under him had been working on the track, and were furnished with a motor-car and trailer, tools and appliances which are used in going from place to place on the section of track on which they were working, and had been so engaged since early morning. About 5 o’clock in the afternoon they had completed their labors for the day and loaded the tools on the two ears, and were proceeding southward toward Jackson where the cars and tools were to be placed off the track and laid aside until the next day’s work, and while they were proceeding southward a north-bound freight train came into view; thus an emergency was created which involved the danger of a collision between the freight-train and the motor-car and trailer and danger of a wreckage of both and the loss of human life, and it became necessary for the decedent and the workmen to use every effort to get the motor-car and the trailer out of the way of the train. The decedent at once stopped the motor-car and ordered the hands to assist in removing it from the track; they got off the motor-car, and two of the hands uncoupled the trailer and pushed it back on the track northward, which was up a steep grade, and turned one end of the motor-car off the track, which was the proper method to get it off, and were endeavoring to lift the end of the motor-car which remained on the track, when the freight train ran into the motor-car, and the decedent was so crushed and mangled in the collision both by the motor-car and the engine that he died. The defendant was negligently running the train off of its schedule time; it was not a train of regular daily operation, and was running one hour and fifty minutes late. On leaving Jackson that morning to go to work, the decedent had been given a lineup of trains, and the train which collided with him, known as “No. 50,” [72]*72was not included in that lineup, and was negligently running at a speed of fifty to sixty miles per hour, this being an unreasonable speed, and the rules of the defendant requiring a reasonable speed at all times. The engineer and fireman in charge of said train negligently failed to keep the proper lookout ahead, the track containing many curves, and it was well known to them that section hands were working on the track at that point. Had said train been running at a proper and reasonable speed, the decedent and the section hands would have been able to remove the motor-car and trailer from the track in time to avoid colliding with the train. The train came into view of the crew of the motor-car and decedent more than one thousand feet away, and at the same time the motor-car and trailer became visible to the crew of the engine, and ordinary care required that all effort should have been made to stop the train, inasmuch as the motor-car was on the track ahead of it, and there was obvious danger of a collision unless the train stopped or the motor-car should be removed. By the exercise of ordinary care and by the application of the brakes at said distance of one thousand feet the train could have been stopped before colliding with the motor-car, or the speed of the train could have been so reduced as to enable the crew of the motor-car to remove it from the track so as to prevent such a violent collision as did occur; in either of which events the life of the decedent would have been saved. The crew of the engine negligently failed, at a distance of one thousand feet away, to put on the brakes, although the decedent was in plain view on the motor-car at said time, and although ordinary care required that the decedent and the motorcar should have been discovered and the brakes on the train applied. There was a public-road crossing approximately one mile south of where the collision occurred, and it was the duty of the defendant and the employees on said freight-train to blow the whistle of the locomotive on approaching said crossing, under a penalty prescribed by law; and the crew of the engine failed to blow said whistle. There was a road crossing about two hundred feet north of where the collision occurred, and the hand-car was between the train and said road crossing, and the defendant had ballasted and prepared the track for said crossing, and had erected a blow-post for said crossing, and in the exercise of ordinary care it was the duty of the defendant, beginning at a point four hun[73]*73clred yards from said crossing, to blow the whistle for the crossing, and the defendant negligently failed to do so and the same contributed to said disaster. Inasmuch as the train was running one hour and fifty minutes late, and inasmuch as the train was frequently annulled, and inasmuch as the section hands were working on this section of the track, and inasmuch as there were curves at this portion of the road at frequent intervals, it was the duty of the engineer to blow the whistle at frequent intervals; and the defendant failed to blow the whistle. The defendant’s servants in charge of the train knew that said section contained a section crew and knew that every day, except Saturday and Sunday, said section crews were on the track at this time of day, returning to the point where the cars and equipment were kept when not in use; and said defendant’s servants negligently failed to give proper warning of their approach, and failed to keep a proper lookout ahead, since they knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known, of the proximity at said time and place of a section crew on the tracks of the defendant. When the train came into view an emergency was created, the motor-car and trailer constituting an obstruction which would likely wreck a train, destroy property, and take human lives, and immediate action was required for the safety of the property involved and of the employees both on the motor-car and on the train; and in view of said emergency the conduct of the decedent in attempting to remove said motor-car and thus save life was, under all the circumstances, not only the act of a courageous man intent upon doing his duty as an employee and as a man, but was also an act in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence.

The.second count of the petition contained the same allegations as the first count, except that the speed of the train was alleged to have been from thirty to thirty-five miles an hour; and it contained different allegations as to the happening of the accident, as follows: The decedent and the hands got off the motor-car, and two of the hands uncoupled the trailer and pushed it back on the track northward, which was a steep upgrade, down which cars would stop, and then run back of their own momentum if left unchocked. The decedent and one of the hands turned one end of the motor-car off the track, which was the proper method to get it off, and the decedent was attempting to lift off the track the end [74]*74of the motor-car which remained on the track, and had his back to the north.

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Related

Graham v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
82 S.E.2d 346 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1954)
Graham v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.
82 S.E.2d 346 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1954)
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad v. Anderson
44 S.E.2d 576 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1947)
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. Anderson
38 S.E.2d 610 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1946)
Southern Railway Co. v. Newman
199 S.E. 753 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.E. 237, 57 Ga. App. 70, 1937 Ga. App. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-southern-railway-co-gactapp-1937.