Southern Railway Co. v. Brooks

125 Tenn. 260
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 125 Tenn. 260 (Southern Railway Co. v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Railway Co. v. Brooks, 125 Tenn. 260 (Tenn. 1911).

Opinion

Mb. Chief Justice Shields

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by R. H. Brooks while a passenger upon one of the passenger trains of the Southern Railway Company. The accident occurred at a station of the railway company, while the train was moving at about two miles an hour and almost in the act of stopping, and resulted from the sudden application of the emergency brakes by the engineer, causing the entire train to lurch backward and recoil with unusual' force and violence. The passengers for that station had been notified to disembark and were preparing to do so. Brooks had arisen from his seat, turned towards the rear of the coach, and was in the act of going back to assist his wife, who was also a passenger, and, when the brakes were applied, was thrown down and against a seat, sustaining serious and permanent personal injuries.

The railway company in its defense proved by the engineer in charge of the locomotive that the brakes were applied in order to prevent the striking and probable killing of a boy who suddenly appeared upon the track some ten feet ahead of the pilot and was crossing to the opposite side, angling towards the engine, in compliance [263]*263with the statute requiring certain precautions to be observed by railroad companies to prevent injuries to persons and animals upon the road before an approaching train.

The trial judge charged the jury that it was the duty of the railway company to keep some one upon its locomotives always upon the lookout ahead, and, when any person, animal, or other obstruction appeared upon the road, to sound the alarm whistle, put down the brakes, and use every possible means to stop the train and prevent the accident; but, while this was true, it was also its duty to exercise the highest degree of care, skill, and foresight possible for the safety of its passengers, and that it was not required to observe the statutory precautions when it would endanger the lives or limbs of passengers. In effect, -the jury was instructed that, where the duty to observe the statutory precautions conflicted with that to passengers, the latter must prevail and be discharged. The charge is quite lengthy; but, while not in the words of the trial judge, the above is the substance and effect of the instruction given to the jury upon this subject.

There was verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff below. The railway company carried the case to the court of civil appeals, and there assigned as error, among other things, the instruction to the jury above stated, which assignment was sustained, and the case is now before us upon certiorari prosecuted by Brooks to reverse the judgment of that court.

[264]*264Railroad companies, as common carriers, undertake to safely carry and deliver their passengers at their destination. In the performance of this contract and obligation, it is their duty to exercise the highest practicable degree of care and skill, and for failure to do so they are liable in damages for all injuries sustained by passengers. They are not insurers of the safety of passengers, as they are of freight. Every one who travels on the conveyances of a common carrier assumes some risks,' such as are necessarily incident to that mode of travel, and for an injury sustained without the fault or neglience of the carrier there is no remedy. Injuries caused by the ordinary and unavoidable jolts and jars of moving trains are within this class. This duty of carriers to their passengers must be strictly discharged, and generally an injury to a passenger- raises a rebuttable presumption of negligence and liability.

Railroad companies also owe duties to persons who may appear upon their road, or within striking distance of their trains. The statute (Shannon’s Code, sections 1574-1576) requires railroad companies to keep the engineer, fireman, or some other person upon their locomotives always upon the lookout ahead, and, when any person, animals, or other obstruction appears upon the road, to sound the alarm whistle, put down the brakes, and employ every possible means to stop the train and prevent an accident, and provides that upon failure to observe these precautions the company shall be liable for all damages to person or property resulting from any accident or collision that mav occur, and also, when [265]*265such, precautions are observed, that they shall not be responsible for such damages; the burden of proving the observance being upon the company. The provisions of this statute have been repeatedly held by this court to be imperative and mandatory, and to require absolute obedience. They must be complied with, regardless of whether it appears they are necessary or will be effective to prevent an accident. Hill v. Railroad Co., 9 Heisk., 823; Railway Co. v. Foster, 88 Tenn., 679, 13 S. W., 694, 14 S. W., 428.

When the precautions are not observed, the company is liable for the damages resulting from a collision. Rapid Transit Co. v. Walton, 105 Tenn., 417, 58 S. W., 737. The several requirements of the statute, sounding the alarm whistle, putting down the brakes, and employing all possible means to stop the train and prevent an accident, are all imperative. They are not to be observed in the order stated in the statute, but the precaution or thing which under the facts of the particular case is most available or effective to avert a collision and prevent the injury must be done. Railway Company v. Scott, 87 Tenn., 501, 11 S. W., 317.

We have no case arising from an apparent conflict of these duties to passengers and persons upon the road where a passenger was injured. All our cases in any way involving the question here presented relate to injuries to persons or animals appearing upon the road before locomotives.

Routon v. Railroad Company, 1 Shan. Cas., 528, was an action to recover for a cow killed upon the track near [266]*266a trestle, in which the engineer testified that it would hare endangered the safety of the train to have reversed his engine at that particular place. In discussing the necessity of observing the statute this court said: “The law does not demand of a railroad company the sacrifice of human life, either the lives of its employees or of its passengers, in order to save a mere article of property.”

Railroad Company v. Troxlee, 1 Lea, 521, was an action to recover for a mule killed upon the road, where the engineer failed to reverse his engine because of danger, on account of the speed, of wrecking the train. In this case it is said: “The statutes made by the legislature for the government of railroads in cases of this kind are quite stringent, and we think justly so; but it certainly was never intended by the lawmakers that anything should be required which would endanger the lives or limbs of persons upon the train.”

The case of Railroad Co. v. Selcer, 7 Lea, 558, was also an action for a mule killed. The engineer testified that to have reversed the engine would have endangered his life and been very injurious to the engine. This .court, in passing upon an error assigned for the failure of the trial judge to charge that upon the testimony of the engineer the company was excused from the observance of the statute, said that injury to the engine or machinery furnished no excuse, but in regard to the danger to the life of the engineer used this language:

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Bluebook (online)
125 Tenn. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-co-v-brooks-tenn-1911.