Patterson v. Yazoo M. v. R. Co.

187 So. 305
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 22, 1939
DocketNo. 1951.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 187 So. 305 (Patterson v. Yazoo M. v. R. Co.) 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
Patterson v. Yazoo M. v. R. Co., 187 So. 305 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

The suit is to recover damages in the sum- of $17,124 for personal injuries which plaintiff claims to have received on May 12, 1936, when he was struck by the locomotive of a log train of the Natalbany Lumber Company while the train was being operated over the tracks of the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley R. R. Company in the town of St. Francisville. Both the railroad company and the lumber company are made defendants in the suit, and a judgment is sought against both companies in solido for the above amount.

*306 The railroad track runs through St. Francisville in almost an easterly and westerly direction. It crosses Ferdinand Street at right angles about 200 feet east of the depot. The track is practically straight for several hundred feet in both directions from the depot, but about a thousand feet west of the depot the track curves to the north and begins a rise or grade. The depot is some 20 feet north of the main track, and almost opposite the depot across the track there is the residence of one Ruffin Green, about 20 feet south of the track and connected with the embankment on which the track is built by a platform or gangway leading from the front porch. There is a switch track between the depot and the main line on which there was standing, on the day of the accident, a box car, a few feet east of the depot.

According to the contention of the plaintiff the accident happened in the following manner: he came-up to the depot in a car driven by a young colored boy, and the car was parked a few feet east of the depot and behind and to the north of the freight car standing on the side-track; he walked across the track between the depot and the box car toward the front of Green’s house for the purpose of talking to him about a business matter; plaintiff stopped on the south side of the track, near the edge of the cross-ties facing in the direction of Green’s house and at a distance of about 26 feet from this house; while he was standing there preparatory to talking to Green who was some 200 feet back of his house, he heard the log train coming from the east toward the crossing; he was standing near the rail, but thought he was out of the way of the train; the log train, traveling at a fast rate of speed and without giving any signals, struck him and knocked him 25 or 30 feet down the embankment and against the front porch of Green’s house, causing the injuries which he describes in his petition.

The negligence charged against the operators of the train is their failure to stop at the crossing; their failure to ring the bell and blow the whistle, their failure to see plaintiff standing beside the track and their failure to stop the train before striking him, and running at an excessive speed in order to make the grade ahead.

The defense is that plaintiff suddenly stepped from behind the box car standing on the switch track and .crossed the main line right in front of the oncoming train, without stopping, looking and listening; that the engineer did all he could to stop the train after plaintiff stepped out from behind the box car and onto the main line in front of the engine, but could not avoid striking him. Defendants deny all charges of negligence, and in the alternative, plead contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff as the proximate cause of the accident.

The case was tried by a jury which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $500 against both defendants. A judgment was signed in accordance with the verdict of the jury, and both defendants have appealed. The plaintiff has filed an answer to the appeal and asked that the judgment be increased to the amount sued for.

Most of the conflict in the testimony revolves around the question of whether plaintiff had crossed the track and was standing on the south side near the edge of the ties when struck by the train, or whether he emerged suddenly from behind the box car into the path of the train. Plaintiff and his counsel insist on the former as the correct state of facts, while the defendants and their counsel claim that the evidence shows the latter to be the true state of facts. There is also a conflict in the testimony as to the speed of the train and the signals given. The jury must have found that the defendants were guilty of negligence and the plaintiff was free from negligence, or else that defendants had the last clear chance to avoid the accident and failed to do so.

Two witnesses, Ruffin Green and the colored boy who was driving the car in which plaintiff rode up to the depot, testified that plaintiff had crossed the track and was standing, near the outside rail on the south side and in front' of Green’s house when the train was approaching the crossing; that the train struck plaintiff while he was standing there talking to Green, or preparing to talk to him. One of these witnesses, Green, says he heard the train blow for the crossing, but did not hear it blow any more until it .struck plaintiff, nor did he hear the bell ringing. The colored boy did not see the train when it hit plaintiff as the box car cut off his view. The boy says the train did not blow for the crossing nor was the bell *307 ringing. Both of these witnesses say the train did not stop for the street crossing and was going at a good speed.

The testimony of both of these witnesses is considerably weakened by a statement they made a few days after the accident and in which they said the plaintiff came from behind the box car in front of the train and had not gotten across the track when he was struck. Both of these witnesses in their statements say that the train blew for the crossing and the bell was ringing. They do not claim that they were misled into signing these statements and make little effort to explain the inconsistency in their testimony and these statements.

As a rule, little weight is given to statements made to claim adjusters after an accident where these statements are made by ignorant colored people and are written out by claim agents and adjusters to bolster up their side of the case, yet, in this case, we cannot see any good reason for entirely ignoring the statements given by these two witnesses immediately after the accident and under circumstances indicating that no persuasion or undue influence was used.

The engineer testified that he blew the whistle for the crossing, started the automatic bell ringing and slowed down for the crossing to about 4 miles' per hour, and then began picking up speed for the grade ahead; that plaintiff stepped out fro'm behind the box car when the train was so close to him that he could see only his head and shoulders; that the train was then going from 10 to 12 miles per hour; he grabbed the throttle and put on the brakes and stopped the train within 150 feet after striking plaintiff. He says the bell was ringing and the train was making a great deal of noise.

The fireman says the train slowed down for the crossing and the bell was started ringing; the train then began picking up speed'to 10 or 12 miles per hour; that when the engine got about mid-way the -box car, the engineer grabbed the throttle and whistle and put on the brakes; there was no one on the track as they approached the crossing; he did not see plaintiff come from behind the box car, but saw him falling in front of the engine and down the embankment on his left side of the engine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 So. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-yazoo-m-v-r-co-lactapp-1939.