Rice v. Southern Pacific Co.

247 Cal. App. 2d 701, 55 Cal. Rptr. 840, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1725
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 12, 1967
DocketCiv. 11331
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 247 Cal. App. 2d 701 (Rice v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Southern Pacific Co., 247 Cal. App. 2d 701, 55 Cal. Rptr. 840, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1725 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

PIERCE, P. J.

Defendant Southern Pacific Company appeals from an adverse judgment in a wrongful death action brought by the widow and children of Wilford Lee Bice who was killed when the vehicle he was driving was struck by a train. Judgment was after a court trial.

We reject the contentions of defendant railroad that as a matter of law (1) it was not negligent, and (2) that decedent was guilty of contributory negligence.

In stating the facts we, of course, observe the rule that all *703 conflicts in the evidence are binding upon a reviewing court, and all reasonable inferences must be drawn in favor of respondents.

The accident occurred January 22, 1962, at 2:10 p.m. It was a crossing accident, approximately within the heart of Gridley. (The railroad depot is less than a block south.) Decedent was driving easterly along Hazel Street, one of the community’s principal east-west paved thoroughfares. The north-south railroad tracks cross at street level. Rice was struck by defendant’s northbound freight train consisting of 91 cars and traveling at 60 miles an hour. The train had not decreased its speed in any respect during its progress through town. The pickup which decedent was driving became impaled upon the locomotive of the freight train and was carried for a distance of more than a mile before the engineer was able to bring the train to a stop. Two other eastbound vehicles had crossed the track ahead of Rice, one of these vehicles having just passed Rice’s pickup and crossed the tracks immediately before decedent was struck. 1

The crossing was guarded by electric wigwag signals equipped with bells. The signals were working and the bells ringing at the time of the accident. That fact must be considered in the light of another set of circumstances: The bells on the signals frequently rang (with the wigwags swinging) when no trains were approaching or crossing through Gridley. Those circumstances occurred when repair and maintenance work was being performed on the tracks and switches. At such times defendant did not deactivate its wigwags. Sometimes the bells rang continuously for over an hour at a time. The evidence showed that the railroad knew the position at all times of all northbound and southbound train traffic. No explanation was given as to why the wigwags were not deactivated during repair work when no trains were in the vicinity. On and before the day of the accident, and prior to the fatal *704 crash, a switch was being installed several blocks south of the Hazel Street crossing. This work had been in progress for a week or so. During these periods the conditions described existed. As one witness expressed it—the bells were ringing “quite a bit.” It is inferable that decedent knew of this condition; had probably passed that way four times earlier that day. 2 A short time before this accident the work had been discontinued on the switch and until the approach and passing of this train, the signals were still and the bells silent.

The evidence conflicts as to whether the train whistle was sounded before the accident and, if it was, at what point. Of plaintiffs’ witnesses, one, Burl Pendergast, seated in a ear with windows closed, heard no whistle. Another, Alan Campbell, remembered one blast of the train whistle which seemed to have been sounded when the train was passing Libby’s Cannery, five blocks south of the scene of the accident. Campbell who was in the open at the time he heard the whistle had had time to walk across the street and get into his ear before the accident happened. Asked, “did you hear the whistle sound again at any time?” he replied, “Not that I recall.” Harold Green, a newspaper linotype operator (whose office was a block away) who had gone to the scene of the accident immediately after the crash, recalled no train whistle but placed no significance upon his failure to remember whether it had been sounded or not. Of the Southern Pacific employees who were witnesses, one, a gang foreman, heard a whistle when the train was approaching Locust Street (the site of Libby’s Cannery), also he heard the whistle blow for Magnolia Street, a block north. Asked: “ Q. And did you hear him [blow] after that?” he answered, “No. The train noise obliterates the sound. . . . [A]fter a train goes by you so far, you can’t hear the whistle.” The testimony of engineer Patterson and fireman Hale was that the whistle had been sounded continuously from 3,000 feet south of town all the way through Gridley.

The testimony of the witnesses unemployed by the railroad as to the sounding of a whistle can be reconciled. There was a *705 north wind blowing which was described by one witness as “howling.” The testimony of the engineer and of the fireman cannot be reconciled with that of the others. Por the purposes of this appeal we must assume that if the whistle was sounded at all it was not sounded closer to the crossing involved in the accident than at a point five blocks to the south. The matter of credibility was for the trier of fact, the trial judge.

Decedent was blind in his right eye, a partial explanation for his failure to have seen the approaching train since he would have to turn his head to see it. In addition, his view was partially obscured by shrubbery and trees of a city park located at the southwest corner of the intersection of Hazel Street with the tracks. Photographs in evidence taken a day after the accident show these trees and shrubbery. A parked vehicle, or vehicles, on the south side of Hazel Street may have tended to obstruct the view. There was testimony that from 50 to 75 feet back (westward) from the tracks, a view of the tracks would be impaired until a driver reached a point 12 feet from the crossing. Appellant depreciates the testimony showing obstructions to view. Its brief states: “[T]he few trees in the park to the South were not an obstruction to the view of any person who had the energy to turn his head to look in the direction from which the train would be coming. ’ ’ The fireman in the cab of the locomotive testified (at his deposition) that he had not seen decedent’s pickup until it was 20 feet (at the trial he said 50 to 75 feet) from the tracks. At that point the front of the locomotive, he said, was 150 feet south of the point of impact. His point of observation (the cab of the engine) was materially better than Rice’s. The import of his testimony was that he was watching carefully for objects ahead. What impaired his view? 3 In this opinion the presence of the trees, shrubbery and parked cars cannot properly be stressed as a factor upon which the court’s finding of negligence hinges. The court in its memorandum opinion did not consider them “of sufficient moment to make it impossible to see an approaching train,” and although it is the court’s findings and not its opinion upon which a reviewing court must rest its decision, the opinion is helpful as an aid to the trial court’s reasoning, and it is obvious that the trial court did not consider the obstructions a determinative factor. (Emphasis is supplied.) It is properly to be noted, how *706

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Bluebook (online)
247 Cal. App. 2d 701, 55 Cal. Rptr. 840, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-southern-pacific-co-calctapp-1967.