Oklahoma Union Ry. Co. v. Houk

1924 OK 737, 235 P. 499, 109 Okla. 187, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 767
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 1924
Docket13564
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1924 OK 737 (Oklahoma Union Ry. Co. v. Houk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma Union Ry. Co. v. Houk, 1924 OK 737, 235 P. 499, 109 Okla. 187, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 767 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

This action was brought in the district court of Creek county, by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error, and for convenience the parties will be designated as they appeared in the court below.

Plaintiff in his petition alleges he was riding on the front seat of an automobile on Division street in the city of Sapulpa, the auto being owned and driven by John Maddox; that the defendant’s interurban line intersects Division street at a “sharp angle”; that the day was “windy and rainy” and while going south on Division street that defendant’s train, consisting of a motor car and trailer, proceeding; in a northeasterly direction, struck the automobile in which plaintiff was a passenger, and caused the injury to the plaintiff, therein complained of. Plaintiff further alleges the defendant’s railway tracks -after leaving the Frisco depot run through a deep cut and around a curve until within 75 yards of the Division street crossing, and there is 75 years of straight track from the end of the cut to the crossing where the accident occurred.

Plaintiff’s petition alleges negligence of the defendant in that its employes “drove the train at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed of 35 miles an hour around the curve and through the cut and along the railway to the crossing” and “that defendant wholly omitted to give any signal either by whistle or bell, of the approach of the train to said crossing, and owing to the wind and rain neither the plaintiff nor the driver of the automobile could see or hear the approach of the train to said crossing.” Plaintiff alleges injury and prays judgment.

Defendant for answer files a general denial and for- further answer alleges plaintiff and the driver of the automobile had been drinking intoxicating liquors, and that plaintiff knew the driver was intoxicated. That the railroad train could be seen from a distance of 150 yards before it reached the intersection of Division street; that the train was proceeding at a very moderate rate of speed; that the motorman sounded his signals, and the plaintiff by the exercise of reasonable diligence could have, and should have seen the train and heard the signals in ample time to have warned the driver of the automobile, but plaintiff failed to warn the driver of the approach of the train; that the automobile was driven against the side of defendant’s train, and alleges contributory negligence.

*188 After reply filed denying all the matters set up in the answer, the cause was tried to a jury and a verdict returned for- the plaintiff, and defendant appeals.

Under the plaintiff’s petition it was necessary for him to prove one or both acts of negligence complained of, to wit: First, that the defendant’s train was being driven at an excessive or dangerous rate of speed; or. second, that the employes in charge of the train failed to sound any signals by whistle or bell.

Plaintiff testified that the weather was “windy and rainy,” that they had the curtains on the car, that as they approached the interurban track, he opened the door and looked for a train but did not see or hoar it, and the automobile slowed up within 30 or 40 feet of the track. It developed that the Frisco railroad crosses Division street just north of the interurban tracks, at a distance of 330 feet, and plaintiff testified he did not see the Frisco passenger train approaching them when they crossed the Frisco tracks but heard it go over the crossing just after the automobile crossed the Frisco tracks, and while they were approaching the interurban tracks, that he opened the door of the automobile and looked because he knew the interurban tracks were there and knew it was about time for the interurban car to come along' there, that they crossed the Frisco tracks without looking or listening for a train. Plaintiff further testifies that he does not know anything ahSut the speed of the train, all he knows is he did not see it or hear any signal.

Maddox, the auto driver, testified that he looked to the left and plaintiff looked to the right for the interurban, and the interurban train came from the right. Maddox could see the interurban tracks from the Frisco tracks a distance of 330 feet, that he had a few drinks and that whisky might have got into his car without him knowing it.

.T. C. Dupree, locomotive engineer, was driving train No. 7 on the Frisco line and saw an automobile shoot across the Division street crossing just ahead of his train, does not know it was the same auto, but saw an auto at the interurban tracks, and saw people carrying a man away just after an auto crossed in front of his train, and the auto was going “mighty fast.”

S. C. Rielly, a farmer by occupation, deposed he was walking down the interurban track toward the approaching train, that he knows it sounded its signals, as he was walking) between the rails and the signals caused him to look up and step off the track to let the train go by, and as it went by it signaled again for the crossing and the second signal was longer than the first.

Some 19 witnesses were sworn and testified for defendant. Some testified to finding bottles of whisky in the wrecked car, and some ten or twelve witnesses, not connected with the defendant company, testified to hearing the interurban train whistle and ring the bell, and the speed of the train before it reached the crossing was variously estimated at from 10 to 15 miles' per hour by disinterested witnesses.

V. O. Eastland, civil engineer, identified a plat made by ¡him showing the Frisco tracks were 330 feet north of the interurban tracks, and from the Frisco crossing a person had an unobstructed view of the interurban tracks for a distance of 450 feet.

O. W. Keller, not employed by the defendant company, testified he was on the interurban car just inside the baggage car door, that the emergency brake was applied and' the automobile struck the interurban just by the baggage car door, and he was within eight feet of it when it struck.

R. H. Terrell, employed by the Sinclair Pipe Line Company, was sitting in the first car of the interurban and heard the motorman blow his whistle two or three hundred feet from the crossing and heard the bell ring, motorman kept “jangling the bell.”

S. O. Manlow of Greonfield, Mo., judged the interurban was running eight mi’.ei per hour and judged the auto was going 40 to 50 miles per hour. Heard the whistle sounded twice before reaching the crossing). The blasts were a minute and a half apart.

Mr. Watson, of the Tulsa fire department, was a passenger on the interurban. The cars were going eight or ten miles per hour, may be 12, and he heard both the whistle and bell about 100 yards from the crossing. He looked out the window and saw the auto swerve as though it was trying to miss the interurban. Witness was standing, and when the motorman applied the brake, it threw witness off his balance.

Mr. Hale was about 75 yards from the scene of the accident and heard the interurban whistle.

J. F. Trour, of Sapulpa, was about 250 feet from the scene of the accident and heard the interurban whistle for the crossing.

Guy Sheffield was on the interurban and ‘felt the air applied.”

*189 Cleo Duckworth, of Sapulpa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 737, 235 P. 499, 109 Okla. 187, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-union-ry-co-v-houk-okla-1924.