Shamburg v. Thompson

186 So. 616
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1939
DocketNo. 1932.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 So. 616 (Shamburg v. Thompson) 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
Shamburg v. Thompson, 186 So. 616 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

LeBLANC, Judge.

On the morning of August 4th, 1937, at about nine o’clock, Henry Davidson, a young negro twenty-two years of age, was run over by a freight train of the New Orleans-Texas and Mexico Railroad Company in the town of De Quincy, in Calcasieu Parish. He sustained severe injuries to both legs, necessitating an emergency operation but from which he died however at 2:30 o’clock of the afternoon of the same day.

His mother,. Agnes Shamburg, alleging that she has a cause of action in her own right growing out of the accident and death of her son, and that she has inherited his cause of action for the pain and suffering which he endured from the time he was injured until his death, has instituted this suit to recover damages in the total sum of $15,000 against the Railroad Company, through Guy A. Thompson, Trustee, who was operating the same under orders of Court at the time of the accident and is still doing so.

She alleges that Carl Davidson, who was her son’s father, had died some two years before this suit was filed, which was therefore prior to her son’s accident and death.

In her petition plaintiff alleges that on the date of the accident defendant was operating its train No. 62, consisting of seventy-three mixed freight cars on its railroad from the town of De Quincy to the station of Anchorage in the Parish of West Baton Rouge. That the said train left the depot / *617 in De Quincy at about 8:45 in the morning. She avers that about 8:55 o’clock, her son, who had been walking in a westerly direction on a sidewalk paralleling the railroad on the south, left the said sidewalk at a point about 2200 feet east from the depot, crossed the street and entered a well beaten pathway which runs diagonally in a northwesterly direction, as he was on his way to keep an appointment with someone on the north side of the railroad tracks. She alleges further that it was necessary for him to go on the right of way of the railroad company and to cross its main track in order to reach his destination, and that accordingly he did enter upon its property and as he approached the tracks, the train referred to was passing that point, going at a speed of approximately eight or ten miles per hour. She avers that her son stopped at a point at least five feet south of and away from the track to await the passing of the train, where it was entirely safe for him to be, had the train been properly inspected, equipped and operated, but that while so standing he was suddenly and violently thrown down under the wheels of the train and both his legs were severed. On information and belief she alleges that one of the cars of the train had a long steel wire about sixteen feet long attached to or dangling from it, and that it was this wire which caught her son and dragged and hurled him under the wheels of the moving train as aforesaid. She charges gross negligence against the defendant, its agents, servants and employees in failing "to have made careful and proper inspection of the train and especially in permitting it to be operated with a wire or cable attached to it or dangling from its side.

She alleges that her son, who was unmarried, lived and boarded with her and contributed regularly to her support. For the loss of such support she asks $5,000; for the pain and suffering endured by him which gave him a cause of action which she inherited she demands $3,000 and for the deprivation of his companionship $7,000.

The defendant for answer admits that it was operating its train No. 62 on the date as alleged and that plaintiff’s son sustained injuries in an accident when he fell under the train, from the effects of which he died the same day. It especially denies however that there was any wire attached to or dangling from the train which could have caught plaintiff’s son and dragged him under the train in the manner set out in her petition. It avers that on the contrary he was attempting to board the said train and that his injuries and death were caused solely by his own negligence in that respect. It denies the negligence charged in its failure of inspection of its train and specifically avers that before it left the station at De Quincy that train was carefully inspected and there were no steel wires or cables dangling on either side of it.

In the alternative, defendant pleads that even if it be found that there was such a wire as described in the plaintiff’s petition attached to or dangling from the train and in which plaintiff’s son became entangled, that her said son was guilty of contributory negligence as he could have seen the same before it reached him had he been exercising due care and could then have avoided the same. It is alleged that he was further negligent in standing as near as five feet to a long train in motion and in failing to see the alleged dangling wire, all of which negligence continued to the moment of the accident and was the proximate cause thereof, and plaintiff is consequently barred from recovery.

On these pleadings the case was heard and after trial and submission the district judge rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,200, whereupon the defendant appealed. Plaintiff has answered the appeal, praying for an amendment of the judgment by increasing the amount of the award to the sum of $8,500.

It is properly stated in briefs of counsel on both sides that the vital point which has to be determined in the first place is whether or not there was a wire dangling or protruding from the side of the train in which plaintiff’s son did become entangled and by which he was dragged under the wheels of the train. Obviously if there was no such wire to hurl and drag him under the train as alleged, plaintiff has failed to establish her charge of negligence against the defendant and the contention that he was injured by falling when he attempted to board the moving train, as set out in its answer, must be given great weight and consideration.

Counsel for defendant attack the plaintiff’s theory about the wire as a whimsical story with no reputable or reliable testimony to support it. The district judge however accepted the testimony on this point and there is where, counsel urge, he committed such manifest error that his finding is not entitled to the usual presumption which attaches to the judgment of the trial Court *618 The only witness who claims to have seen the 'wire and who saw the same come in contact with the deceased, and afterwards saw him trying to extricate himself as he was moving along with the train, is a negro named Lige Simpson. This witness lives on the south side of the railroad track, the side on which the boy was standing; about fifty-five steps from the point where the accident happened. He states that he was sitting in a chair on his front porch facing the railroad and could plainly see the boy standing near the track. He was not facing the place where the accident happened directly, but diagonally. When asked to describe what he saw happen, he answers: “When I saw him he was going just this way, and I looked and I saw him going and a piece of wire had him. He was fighting the wire trying to get aloose from it. He got about seven steps and he fell.

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Related

Audubon Ins. Co. v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co.
68 So. 2d 232 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)
Doyle v. Thompson
50 So. 2d 505 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1951)
Young v. Broussard
189 So. 477 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shamburg-v-thompson-lactapp-1939.