Southern Railway Company v. Mrs. Nora B. Jolley

267 F.2d 934
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 1959
Docket17447
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 267 F.2d 934 (Southern Railway Company v. Mrs. Nora B. Jolley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Railway Company v. Mrs. Nora B. Jolley, 267 F.2d 934 (5th Cir. 1959).

Opinions

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

Ralph Jolley’s widow brought suit for damages against the Southern Railway Company for the wrongful death of her husband that resulted from a railroad crossing collision between one of the railroad company’s trains and a Jeep station wagon driven by Jolley. The case was tried without a jury. The district court awarded the widow damages in the amount of $24,000. We reverse and remand.

Ralph Jolley was a dairyman and farmer residing at Clarkston, Georgia. Sunday morning, December, 11, 1955, Jolley left home to attend to his dairy business. He told his wife that on his way home he would stop off at Duluth, Georgia, to pick [935]*935up a puppy as a gift for his granddaughter.

That evening, some time after 9 o’clock, Jolley was driving south on Highway 23 within the city limits of Duluth. The highway run's generally in a north-south direction at Duluth, and is about two hundred fifty feet east of the main line tracks of the railroad. Jolley turned off the highway and took the Old Peach-tree Road. He was travelling at a speed of twenty-five miles an hour, more or less. He approached the crossing at the Old Peachtree Road. He failed to stop before he reached it.

At the same time, appellant’s fast, streamlined train, the “Southerner”, also was approaching the crossing. It was travelling north at about sixty miles an hour, a speed not unusual for the Southerner. Jolley’s station wagon struck the side of the train’s engine some twelve or fourteen feet from the front, just under the engineer’s seat. Jolley was killed instantly.

The crossing at which the collision occurred was a dangerous one. It was marked only by the usual cross-arm sign on one side of the tracks. It had no stop signs. There was no watchman. There were no automatic signal warnings to notify a motorist of an approaching train. There was evidence, vigorously disputed by the railroad, tending to show that the view of a driver of a vehicle traveling west toward the crossing was obscured by shrubbery and grass on top of a ten foot bank through which the railroad tracks were cut. Thus, it was not possible to see a train approaching from the left until one was almost upon the tracks. Houses and trees also obstructed a driver’s vision as he came toward the crossing. The tracks curve somewhat to the left so that the headlight beams of a train travelling north are not cast down the tracks and past the crossing until the train reaches the straightaway.

The engineer had sounded the warning whistle. As the train was about five hundred feet from the crossing the fireman saw Jolley turning off of Highway 23. He could not see the vehicle all the way up to the crossing but he could see the headlight beams at many points. At first, he did not notify the engineer of Jolley’s presence at the crossing because he assumed Jolley would stop. Then, when the train was almost two hundred feet from the crossing, the fireman warned the engineer. The engineer sounded the cattle alarm on the whistle. Jolley did not stop. And it was too late to stop the train. Apparently, Jolley saw the train for the first time as the train came upon the crossing.

The district court held that the railroad was negligent: “primarily for failure * * -x- install a signal device at this very dangerous crossing * * * in the absence [of which] a traveler along the road approaching the crossing could not be assured of safety without exercising a degree of care not ordinarily required”; a traveler would have to exercise “extraordinary care and diligence, [by] approach [ing] within a short distance of the railroad tracks, com [ing] to a complete stop and look [ing] in both directions before going across”. That “is not the standard of care provided by Georgia laws”. “In some states”, the trial judge added, “the dangerous nature of the crossing causes courts to put all the exercise of care upon the traveler upon the highway and bars the plaintiff from recovery, but in other states, as in Georgia, such dangerous condition seems to put the greater burden upon the railroad”. In awarding damages, however, the trial judge reduced the amount by twenty-five per cent, under the Georgia Comparative Negligence Statute (Ga.Code Ann. § 94-703), “on account of some negligence on the part of the deceased * * * who, however, is not found guilty of such negligence (in avoiding the consequences of defendant’s negligence, failing to exercise due care for his own protection) as will bar the plaintiff from recovery”. The trial judge stated: “It is true that [Jolley] would not have met with this tragedy had he driven his car to a point which would give him a clear view of the tracks to the south, and at that point come to [936]*936a complete stop. * * * [But] in the absence of proof to the contrary it must be assumed that the deceased did exercise ordinary care and diligence”. “There is a presumption at law that the deceased was in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence.”

We do not question the trial judge’s statement of the heavy burden placed upon the railroad as a consequence of having a hazardous crossing. We question the trial judge’s statement of the standard of care that Jolley was bound to follow.

Jolley was no stranger to Duluth. He had crossed the tracks at the Old Peachtree Road many times. He was familiar with the crossing. He knew all about the “Southerner”. And it is not unreasonable to assume, as did the district court, that he was familiar with the schedule of the train. It was a bitter cold winter night, and undoubtedly, as the district court assumed, Jolley’s car windows were up. The trial judge found that he could neither see nor hear the approaching train. But he could see the tracks and he knew where they were. He did not even slow down.

Georgia law — we follow it under Erie — creates a presumption of negligence against the railroad when injuries are caused by the operation of railway cars, but allows the presumption to be negated by evidence showing that the motorist could have avoided the consequences of the railroad’s negligence through the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety. Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Barnett, 1926, 35 Ga.App. 528, 134 S.E. 126, 128, presents an excellent summary of the applicable principles :

“Under the law in force in this state, where damages are proven to have resulted to the plaintiff by the operation of the cars of a defendant railway company, a presumption of negligence arises against the defendant in respect of each of the negligent acts charged, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover the damage proven to have resulted to him on such a prima facie case, unless the defendant shall carry the burden of showing that the damage was done by plaintiff’s consent, or was caused by his own negligence, or that the defendant was not actually guilty of the negligence charged, or, if so, that the plaintiff could have avoided its consequences by the exercise of ordinary care after it had or should have became (sic) apparent. Even if it be made to appear that the negligence of the plaintiff contributed in some less degree to the injury, he is still entitled to recover, under the doctrine of comparative negligence, in an amount diminished in the proportion of the lesser default attributable to him.

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267 F.2d 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-company-v-mrs-nora-b-jolley-ca5-1959.