Sharp v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

193 N.W. 150, 110 Neb. 34, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 172
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1923
DocketNo. 22152
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 N.W. 150 (Sharp v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 193 N.W. 150, 110 Neb. 34, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 172 (Neb. 1923).

Opinions

Dean, J.

Plaintiff, as alleged, was driving east in an automobile on a highway about five miles west of Lincoln. The highway is a continuation of west O street, one of Lincoln’s main business thoroughfares, and is a part of the road then known as the Omaha, Lincoln and Denver highway. The highway is paved for about eight miles west of the city, and at a point about five miles west of the corporate limits it intersects a crossing of defendant railroad. In 1918 the railroad tracks Avere elevated several feet at the street intersection and a railroad bridge Avas constructed by the company over the highAvay to permit travel on the street thereunder. The subAvay under the track Avas also constructed by the railroad company. The bridge is supported by large timbers or pillars in the center of the subway, midway between the north and south borders of the paved highway. As plaintiff approached from the Avest his car ran into the company’s central bridge support, and from the resulting impact he received serious personal injuries and his car was damaged.

Alleging that Lancaster county was also liable in that it negligently permitted the railroad to construct the bridge in a negligent manner, in that the supports rvere placed in the center of the road Avithout any warning sign, plaintiff made the county a party defendant. For the personal injuries so sustained, and for the damage to his car, plaintiff recovered a verdict and [36]*36judgment for $6,750. Defendants appealed separately.

Plaintiff was an insurance solicitor. Before the accident he earned about $5,000 or $6,000 a year. He was then aged 51 years. With respect to his injuries he testified in substance that in the evening of October 8, 1920, he was driving alone to Lincoln in a Ford car; that he reached the intersection in question about 7:30 or 8 o’clock; that the night “was very dark and windy,” and the “weather ivas very dry at that time and the dust was very bad.” With respect to the immediate happening of the accident he testified:

“Well, I was on the paving and it was very dark and very dusty. The dust would come in waves, and I met several cars, and when I would meet those cars-1 would pull out to the side of the street and stop and Avait till they got by. Nobody turned on their dimmers because it Avas so dark, and it would blind a person to look in them and I Avould pull out and stop. Then I Avould pull up in the Centex-, as near as I could, in order to keep from rxxnnixxg off either side;” that he had never seen the Burlington bridge until the xxight in question, though in yeax*s goxxe by he had traveled the road; that he did not see the piling before he stxnxck it xvith his car.

He further testified: “When I hit the piling there seemed to be a flash of light, and my face seemed to be upxvard and I saxv what I thought Avas a telephone pole; and I thoxxght I had hit a telephone pole. I never thought of such a thing as there being such an obstruction in the road. I supposed I had hit a telephone pole, looking up jxxst a 'moment, a second, a flash, and that is all I kxxoAV. I am all through after that.” That he had no x*ecollection of hoAV he got home or of axxything that happened xxxxtil Christmas; that the accident greatly impaired his memory and his ability to x-ecoguize persons; that he had eight teeth broken, his head Avas badly hurt, and two pieces of bone were l’emoved from oixe of his fingers; that at the time of the tx-ial his [37]*37breathing was “congested” and that it was then hard for. him to breathe; that before the injury he was strong and able-bodied and his health was good and he never had any of the trouble that continuously afflicted him since then; that at Christmas he could not yet stand on his feet; that he had driven a car a great deal for about 12 years and never before had an accident; that in his business as an insurance solicitor he traveled almost exclusively in an automobile, and that at the time the car was reasonably worth $400, but was valueless afterward.

Before the examination of plaintiff closed it developed that his hearing was impaired, and that he was “deaf in one ear,” and that he had difficulty in recalling names of persons. Plaintiff testified that he was a careful driver; that his rate of speed at the time was about 15 miles an hour, and that it was never more than 20 miles an hour on paved roads; that just before he struck the pier the dust whirled around so that he could not see 6 feet ahead.

Ralph Cox, a young man living 300 or 400 feet south of the intersection testified that he heard the car strike against the piling about 7:30 or 8 o’clock; that he saw the headlights of a car about 200 feet away coming from the east just a few seconds before the impact; that by the sound he thought the two cars must have collided; that he and his brother found plaintiff sitting in his car leaning forward over the steering wheel, which was in an upright position and evidently bent forward; that plaintiff “seemed to hold his chest; his hand was bleeding slightly and one limb;” that there was no warning signal at the bridge, but the piling was painted white, and that after the accident a danger signal was placed in the center of the piling. Subsequently all of the evidence respecting the “changed condition,” to which the witness testified, was stricken out and the jury were instructed not to consider it at all.

The testimony of Ralph’s brother, Ray, with respect [38]*38to plaintiff’s condition, was substantially to the same effect, and also that, of Robert Cox, the father of the young men. The latter testified, however, that the first thing he remembered hearing plaintiff say was that he .did not see' the piling; that plaintiff insisted that he .could get out of the car without help, but he could not .do so and had to be helped until he got almost to the car in which he was taken home, “then he seemed to. land of faint away.” It appears from the evidence of iír. Cox that as the bridge is approached from the west two large danger signs have to be passed and they are visible at night with the aid of ordinary automobile lights.

Three physicians were called who had. attended plaintiff. Another testified as an X-ray expert. Dr. Bently, a physician of about 40 years’ experience, testified that when he was called to plaintiff’s residence, the night of He injury, he found him bruised and delirious; that he bandaged three fractured ribs and both lower limbs: that the back of his neck was bruised, stiff, sore and swollen; that this condition continued several weeks; that he had a glass cut near his right eye and another on the jaw and chin and a severe gash on the right leg between the knee and the ankle, and he was bruised on the left leg and on the middle finger of the right hand; that he suffered considerable pain and had to be kept under .opiates; that his back was strained, “so that he had to be lifted up and down on account of the pain and soreness in the lumbar region; the chest was pretty sore, tender to touch and difficult breathing; his neck was stiff and he could not turn his head either way for two or three ,Aveeks. He had to be raised up. After we got him out of bed he had to be raised up in áñ elevated chair for .quite a Avhile in order to sit up at all.” and he Avas unable to walk.

The evidence of the other tAvo physicians substantially corroborated Dr. Bently’s evidence, and one of them Avho Avas subsequently, called to treat plaintiff for a con[39]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 N.W. 150, 110 Neb. 34, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-neb-1923.