Parker v. Southern Railway Co.

17 S.E.2d 750, 66 Ga. App. 295, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 11, 1941
Docket29152.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 S.E.2d 750 (Parker 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
Parker v. Southern Railway Co., 17 S.E.2d 750, 66 Ga. App. 295, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 202 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

Felton, J.

The person acting as yard conductor on the date of the injuries testified: “I saw the Southern car on that track. When we hacked in there I picked it up and headed out. I coupled the rear of the engine to it. I backed up about 60 feet to the coal-chute track with this car, and we went into the coal chute with it. When we went into the coal-chute track we could see some cars on the coal-chute track. We could not tell what cars were on there. I don’t recall whether I told my field man or my engine man the number of it. I found out what cars were on there. The car I went after (the Eock Island and a ’Frisco car), was on the coal-chute track. The car I wanted was the rear car. In other words the car that I did not want was the middle car. I went in there and coupled up those two cars. When I say the rear car, I mean the Eock Island car was the car we wanted, and it was near the end of the coal trestle and the ’Frisco car was on the end next to the house lead. We had no orders on the ’Frisco car. As to what is our practice where we don’t have any orders, when we find a car on a siding connected in a cut of cars we want, well, we cut the car we want out of there and put the other cars back where we find them; we don’t bother those cars unless we have orders to do so. I backed into the coal-chute track with the car that I had gotten from the cloth-room track, that was the Southern car, and headed back out the lead, and set one out; in other words, I shoved it out and cut it off. The car we wanted was a Eock Island car. We backed south on the lead and set it direct north on the main line. I headed back out the lead. My engine was headed south. We hacked up and left the Eock Island car on the lead somewhere north of this coal-trestle switch. That put our engine next to the ’Frisco car. After we set this car out, I stayed there. We have to book these cars. We have to put them on the yard book. We have to get the number of the car and turn this book in at night for a yard record. That is what I was doing. And sometimes I have *298 known them to roll back there; they have a sort of slant, and they will roll back there: This track where this car was sitting is on a slant. I mean it has gravity; it is on a slant and you have to watch them or check them to keep them from rolling back; and I stayed with the Eock Island car and booked it while the others shoved this other car back into the coal-trestle track. The purpose of going back into the coal-trestle track was to carry this car that I had nothing on; to shove it back to the platform where we got it. I mean the ’Frisco. You see, I did not have anything on that. I do not know whether it was a load or empty. I shoved the ’Frisco car back onto the trestle track where I found it, and left it there. That movement from the switching of that ’Frisco car back on to the coal-trestle track was the movement in which Mr. Parker claims to have been injured. I did not see it. After the movement was completed the ’Frisco car was cut off and left at the end of the trestle track, and then the engine pulled out and headed south; headed back out with the Southern car.

“Well, we got out on the lead and Mr. Palmer, that was a switch-man, signalled for me to. come around and told me that Mr. Parker had fell, and I lit out around there as fast as I could go. Assuming that that is all over with and everything had happened, and get back to our next movement as we got in that trestle track, I pulled back out and got on the lead again. After that we caught the Eock Island car that we had kicked out with the Southern car and headed back down the lead. We coupled the Eock Island car with the Southern car, we had the Southern car coupled to the engine all the time, and after coupling with the Eock Island I carried them back to the yard and headed back across this same crossing that I came to when I went up there, and put them in No. 1 track in the yard. We have tracks numbers 1, 3, 3, 4, etc., and this No. 1 track is next to the southbound main line; and I cut the cars off and left them there and notified the yardmaster. I had nothing to do with putting them into a train. . . If I had gone and gotten that Southern car and I had not wanted to carry it around with me, in order to get hold of the Eock Island car, I would have had to make an extra switch and shove it towards the northbound and I would have had to shove it up there and cut it off and headed back down and backed in. We figure on time in switching, you see. That would have been quite a bit of extra *299 work to do that, extra switching. I could have gotten it and carried it down three quarters of a mile and come back. So much time would have been used I would not have got to have went back. It was necessary for me to couple on that Southern car in order for me to go on and get hold of the Rock Island car for my convenience. I could, if I had wanted to, have gone to the coal trestle and gotten my Rock Island car before I got the Southern car but we would have been running by work. We always take the work as we come to it. The first thing I come to I pick it up, and the Southern car was attached to the back of the engine during the switching movement of the Rock Island ear. All this time we were switching the Rock Island car it was extra baggage or whatever you might call it. We think nothing about a movement like that with a switch engine. As I told you awhile ago, it saved me a switch there. If I had picked this car up and carried it there, I would have had to- back into the coal chute, and it saved me an extra movement there. That was not the only reason we backed in there and picked it up at that time. I did not know where the other cars were.

“As I told you, we get a list of ears at Poe Mill, and they don’t tell us where to find those cars at. We have got to look for them, and it was dark and I had to hunt them and locate the cars and where they were. That was 'the only reason I went in there, was because it was the first car and it was the easiest thing to do. In making our switching movement, we frequently couple up with one, two, three or four or five cars. That is what we do with the switch engine; we get a cut of them and switch them off plumb on up until we cut the last one off. We just switch them off and cut the last one loose from the engine. If'we had several cars to get at different places, we would accumulate those cars as we came to them. In working industries like that, if we accumulated big bunches of them, of course, naturally we would not try to go in no close places, or nothing like that, with a bunch of cars. It would be convenient to shove those cars out somewhere. If we don’t have a big bunch of cars we frequently switch around with three or- four attached to the ’ engine. This map approximately represents the situation out there as to the tracks into Poe Mill. That is the main switching léad. That is the outside track, or the most westerly track of Poé Mill. The next two tracks are the northbound and the southbound. The next one to Poe Mill is the house-lead *300 track. This first track that runs off to the right from the house track is the cloth-room track that comes out from the house lead into the clothroom. The next track running off to the right in Poe Mill is the coal-chute track. The distance between the cloth-room track switch and the coal-chute track switch, approximately, would be about 60 or 65 feet, or something like that. I haven’t measured it.

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Related

Riordan v. W. J. Bremer, Inc.
466 F. Supp. 411 (S.D. Georgia, 1979)
Parker v. Southern Railway Company
21 S.E.2d 106 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.E.2d 750, 66 Ga. App. 295, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-southern-railway-co-gactapp-1941.