Rico v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad

140 So. 2d 198, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1820
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 1962
DocketNo. 343
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 So. 2d 198 (Rico v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad) 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
Rico v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad, 140 So. 2d 198, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1820 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

The plaintiff, Manuel Rico, and his collision damage insurer sued the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Co., for personal injuries to plaintiff, Manuel Rico, and for automobile property damage. The suit was dismissed and the plaintiffs have appealed.

The locale of the accident was in Jefferson Parish on Fourth Street in the Town of Harvey, Louisiana. Fourth Street parallels the Mississippi River on the West side. Between the highway and the river is the main line track of the railroad, running parallel to the street. The evidence does not show how far the main track is from the street. Just above where this accident happened, a spur track branches from the main line away from the river and crosses Fourth Street at an angle toward the south. The crossing is at street level. At about 7:30 p. m., on July 23, 19S6, the plaintiff, Manuel Rico, had entered Fourth Street from Destrehan Avenue, driving his Buick automobile. Upon entering Fourth Street, said plaintiff turned left to go up-river and across the spur track. At that time a diesel switch engine, belonging to defendant and operated by its employees, was proceeding down the railroad track parallel to Fourth Street, took the spur track to cross the street. The engine was in backup position. When the back end of the engine, the forward end of its movement backwards, was near the middle of the street, the left front corner of plaintiff’s automobile struck the near forward [199]*199corner of the engine, with resulting personal injuries to Manuel Rico and damages to the car.

The composite testimony of all plaintiffs’ witnesses is essentially the same as to their observation and knowledge of what happened immediately prior to and at the moment of the impact. Mr. Barras was driving on the same .road in the same direction as plaintiff at a “car’s distance” behind the plaintiff. Mr. Monteith was a passenger in plaintiff’s car, sitting on the front seat beside plaintiff. Mr. Guidry, Rico’s father-in-law, was in front of his barbershop on the woods side of the road, which, as shown by the pictures, is almost directly opposite where the spur track crosses the road. Mrs. Guidry, plaintiff Rico’s mother-in-law, was standing on the sidewalk in front of her husband’s barbershop.

The plaintiff, Mr. Monteith and Mr. Bar-ras all testified that plaintiff was going at a very moderate irate of speed, with his car lights on. Barras said he did not see the locomotive until the car hit it. Mon-teith said he saw it when it was coming into the road. The car was then twenty-five or thirty feet from it. The plaintiff did not see the engine until his car was within ten or twelve feet of it. None of plaintiffs’ witnesses heard the locomotive’s bell ringing or the whistle blowing and none of them saw any light on the locomotive. Mr. and Mrs. Guidry did not know anything about the approaching of plaintiff’s car because they did not see it until the car and the locomotive collided. The forward end of the engine had reached about the middle of the road. All these witnesses said that after the impact the engine moved about ten feet, which pulled the front end of the car with it and when the engine stopped, the forward end was almost to the woods side of the pavement and the car came to rest at an angle across the road.

The members of the engine crew testified that the whistle was blowing, the bell ringing, and the backup light of the locomotive was shining. Five railroad employees were aboard. Two were on the platform and the engineer, fireman and one other were in the cabin located right at the forward end. The engineer, fireman and engine foreman said the locomotive came to a complete stop before entering the highway and seeing that the road was clear the engine was moved into the road. About that time plaintiff came into the road and traveled about one hundred fifty feet toward them at a moderate speed. The engineer said he watched the car and expected it to stop because the engine was going across plaintiff’s side of the road. When he saw the car was not stopping he threw on the emergency brake and stopped immediately with about half the road blocked. The other employees said the engine stopped and blew the whistle before entering the road and was moving across the river side (plaintiff’s right side) of the road with the bell ringing at from two to four miles an hour as plaintiff traveled about one hundred fifty feet from Destrehan Avenue where he entered Fourth Street.

The only obstruction to plaintiff’s view of the locomotive on the river side of the street was some telephone posts which in themselves did not cut off the view of the approaching engine, as shown by the pictures. Part of the engine was dark in color, and portions of it, including the whole back end, were striped in alternate wide orange and black diagonal conspicuous stripes. The backup light of the engine was said to be ten feet above the ground. The engine itself was about forty feet long. Even if the street light at the location was not of large candle power and the neon or advertising lights in front of the business houses did not illuminate the road at a great distance, the fact is that plaintiff not only had the benefit of the lights on his own automobile, the lights of the Barras’ car closely behind him must have added some light to the scene.

[200]*200Plaintiff’s contention- is that the operators of the locomotive should have provided adequate signals, a barricade, or at least a flagman at the scene to give unmistakable warning to automobile traffic. There is testimony to the effect that these devices and means of warning are not required at a railroad crossing of this type, this being a spur track at street level, not a main line, and used to service some nearby industries.

We do not find it necessary to analyze and appraise the requirements of the railroad in this situation, for the reason that we first shall consider whether or not the plaintiff was negligent under the plea of contributory negligence filed by defendant.

This plaintiff, Manuel Rico, said that he was within twelve or fifteen feet from the locomotive when he first saw it at which time the locomotive was on the edge of the road. That could not be a fact because the forward end of the engine was far enough into the road for the left front corner of the car to strike the near front corner of the engine. It is very definite that the locomotive was proceeding slowly. He heard no bell or whistle and saw no light on the locomotive. Mr. Rico had the very important and solemn duty to keep a proper lookout, inasmuch as Mr. Rico frankly admitted that he had been living in that locality for ten years and was familiar with the fact that the spur track crossed the road at this point and that it was used by the railroad. He admits he did not look except straight ahead. He could and should have seen the engine in time to stop his car.

There are many reliable authorities which discuss the rights and obligations of the respective parties at railroad-highway crossings. Reference to a few of the Court decisions on the subject will suffice to show that the railroad in this case now before us was not negligent:
“In action for damages resulting from railroad crossing accident, it is not alone sufficient for plaintiff to say that he did not see the approaching train not hear any noise, whistle or bell giving warning of the train’s approach.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 So. 2d 198, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rico-v-texas-new-orleans-railroad-lactapp-1962.