Southern Pacific Company v. Watkins

435 P.2d 498, 83 Nev. 471, 1967 Nev. LEXIS 314
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1967
Docket5272
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 435 P.2d 498 (Southern Pacific Company v. Watkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pacific Company v. Watkins, 435 P.2d 498, 83 Nev. 471, 1967 Nev. LEXIS 314 (Neb. 1967).

Opinion

*474 OPINION

By the Court,

Collins, J.:

This is an action by Robert L. Watkins against the Southern Pacific Railroad for personal injuries and property damage suffered by him as a result of a train-car collision at a railroad *475 crossing. This appeal is from an order of the trial court denying a new trial, and from a judgment of the trial court based upon the verdict of a jury in favor of respondent Watkins and against appellant Southern Pacific Company for the sum of $134,737.45. The award by the jury was for compensatory damage. The jury refused a request for punitive damage against appellant.

Appellant assigns as error the following legal issues:

1. Admission of evidence of prior accidents at the same railroad crossing.

2. Reception of the testimony of witness Capshaw giving his opinion of the degree of danger at the crossing involved.

3. Reception of testimony of witness DeMers calling for his opinion as to the degree of danger at the crossing.

4. Giving of instructions Nos. 22, 23, 26 and 31.

5. Refusal to give appellant’s offered instruction No. 3.

6. Refusal to permit appellant to call a witness located during the trial and not listed as one of his witnesses before trial.

7. Making the dep'ondent, Gary Hansen, the court’s witness in part.

8. Refusal to grant a new trial on the ground of excessive damages.

9. Refusal to grant a new trial on the ground that the verdict resulted from the jury’s manifest disregard of the court’s instructions.

The jury having found for respondent and against appellant requires that we state the facts in accordance with those findings. Robert L. Watkins of Reno was injured November 4, 1964 when his pickup truck was rammed by a locomotive at a Southern Pacific grade crossing at Sparks, Nevada, known as Stanford Way. Stanford Way is a two-lane, north-south highway. At this particular crossing, twelve sets of railroad tracks traverse Stanford Way in an east-west direction. These dozen tracks form the eastern portion of the Sparks switching yard and amount to the largest group of tracks to cross a roadway within the entire division of the Southern Pacific Co. One-half second is the normal time to traverse a railroad crossing. To cross Stanford Way it requires approximately fourteen times as long. The surface of the crossing is very rough and tends to create a noise that is distracting to drivers. The crossing is very active. It had an estimated auto traffic of 4,300 motor vehicles on the day of the accident. Its train traffic, on the *476 average, consisted of 8,500 trains per year, in addition to some 10 to 55 switching operations which crossed the roadway daily. The crossing has no electronic gates, gongs, or other devices to warn motorists of the approach of locomotives or trains.

There was conflicting evidence as to the light level required and maintained at the crossing by Southern Pacific Co. Testimony indicated that the American Standards Association recommendations call for at least one foot-candle of light on railroad crossings, and for as much as 5 foot-candles if the crossing is of an industrial nature. One expert testified that he found, through photometer tests, the level of light to vary between 1.35 and .35 foot-candles. Another stated it was as low as .35 on the road, .13 only 30 feet from the roadway, and only .015 at a point on the road 100 feet south of the tracks. The experts further related that the lighting should not be spotty because such lighting causes a substantial impairment of vision. Minimum standards were said to require a variance of less than 3 to 1, whereas evidence indicated the ratio of variance at this crossing to be as great as 12 to 1. One expert said that it would be safer to remove all lighting rather than to maintain it in such an irregular state.

Evidence indicated that the Southern Pacific Co. was placed on notice of the increasing traffic conditions and dangerous defect of the crossing. It included the following:

1. That at the request of the City of Sparks, a meeting was held between city and railroad officials to discuss the accident rate at the crossing wherein the city officials asked the railroad to post flagmen at the crossing or to otherwise protect the public. The railroad took no action.

2. That the railroad had taken no action upon a promise to the Sparks city council by a railroad executive to recommend the provision of more light at the crossing.

3. That the railroad secured an injunction against the Sparks city council’s attempted remedy of the situation, by enactment of an ordinance requiring flagmen at the crossing.

4. That during the 10 months preceding this particular accident, seven other accidents under somewhat similar conditions had occurred at the Stanford Way Crossing and the railroad had yet to have the crossing examined by lighting or safety engineers.

5. That the Southern Pacific Co. was informed by an engineer for Sierra Pacific Power Co. that the lighting at the Stanford Way Crossing for the roadway and the 200 feet of adjoining track could be increased to 5 foot-candles for the cost of $2,500 and that the railroad company indicated it did not intend to improve the lighting.

*477 The locomotive involved in the accident is a r'oadswitcher, larger, more powerful and of a different design than a normal switch engine. It is over 55 feet in length, weighs approximately 250,000 pounds and is black in color. When the engine is moving in a reverse motion, the length of the engine precedes the cab containing the engineer and fireman. While in reverse the engineer’s field of vision from the cab is limited to his side of the engine. The fireman’s vision is equally limited on the opposite side. The function of the fireman is to be the eyes of the engineer as to things on his side of the engine and either to relay a warning or in an emergency to actuate a brake available to him. A few months before the Watkins’ injury, the Southern Pacific Railroad removed firemen from the engines in the Sparks yard. Since they were not replaced by other available employees who would serve as lookouts, the result was that every time such an engine crossed Stanford Way, the engineer drove blind as to one direction of the vehicular traffic, a condition which was aggravated even further when travelling in reverse. The Southern Pacific Co. had been notified that the removal of the firemen hampered the effective visibility of the engineer and thus constituted a hazard.

Witnesses testified that, on the night of the injury, two or more boxcars were located on the middle tracks east of the crossing. Due to the switching operations at this crossing it was admittedly common practice to park boxcars in proximity to the roadway, both east and west of the road on the 12 tracks and in ever-changing positions. This not only tended to hide on-coming trains from the view of the passing motorists but was also a violation of the railroad rules.

A few minutes before 2:00 a.m., on the night in question, the crew of No.

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Bluebook (online)
435 P.2d 498, 83 Nev. 471, 1967 Nev. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-company-v-watkins-nev-1967.