Southern Railway Company v. Terry

109 So. 2d 913, 40 Ala. App. 186, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 129
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 19, 1958
Docket8 Div. 81
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 109 So. 2d 913 (Southern Railway Company v. Terry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals 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. Terry, 109 So. 2d 913, 40 Ala. App. 186, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 129 (Ala. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinions

HARWOOD, Presiding Judge.

Suit below was for the recovery of damages sustained by plaintiff’s tractor when it was struck by defendant’s train at a crossing in the Town of Courtland.

The complaint contained two counts. Count 1, as amended, charged the defendant railroad with negligence in failing to warn of the approach of its locomotive to the crossing by ringing the locomotive’s bell and sounding its horn.

Count 2, charged the defendant generally with negligence in the operation of its train.

To each count the defendant plead in short by consent, etc.

The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, damages being assessed at $800. ,

The defendant’s motion for a new trial being overruled, an appeal was perfected to this court.

For convenience, we will hereinafter in this opinion refer to the appellant as the defendant, the position it occupied in the court below, and so with the appellee',, plaintiff below.

As to the site of the collision, the evidence-shows that College Street runs north and south in Courtland, and is crossed by the defendant’s railroad running east and west. On the northeast corner of the intersection is a vacant lot, and north of this vacant lot is Blythe’s store, fronting on College Street. There is a rather large oak tree growing on the lot near College Street, about midway between Blythe’s store and the railroad track. Some tractors and farm machinery were parked on the'vacant lot on the side of the railroad right of way and parallel to it.

The evidence introduced by the plaintiff below, except as to damages, consisted of the testimony of Carl Gibson, who was. driving the tractor as an employee of the plaintiff, and of Robert Hill.

Carl Gibson testified that about 2:30' P.M. on the day of the collision he was. driving a tractor south on College Street, A wagon filled with ground corn was hitched to the tractor.

He was familiar with the crossing, and as he approached it he stopped the tractor 5 to 10 feet from the track and looked in both directions. He could not see very far toward the east, the direction from which the train came, as the tractors and the oak tree cut off his view. Not hearing, or seeing a train he proceeded to cross the track. The train was “on him when he first saw it,” and he attempted to change gears and cut the tractor to the right. This operation killed the engine of the tractor and he jumped from the tractor just as it was hit by the locomotive.

As to pertinent distances Gibson testified that it was about fifteen feet from the railroad track to Blythe’s store, and about ten feet from the track to the oak tree.

On cross examination Gibson testified that on the day following the collision he signed a written statement concerning the collision for A. J. Parker, claim agent for the defendant. At the trial he stated he did [189]*189not remember some of the statements as written, and stated he was scared at the time he gave the statement. Mr. Roy Terry, the plaintiff, was present at the interview, and witnessed Gibson’s signature as did Parker. After Gibson signed the statement he made the following 'notation “ — read—true.”

This statement signed by Gibson sets forth, among other things:

“When I reached College Street, I turned south toward the railroad crossing. Mr. H. B. Terry pulled out from a store ahead of me, and I was following behind Mr. Terry when he drove over the crossing and saw him throw his hand up, and then I saw the train coming west. I was then about 20 or 25 feet north of the track when I saw the train, and I put the brakes on and tried to stop, but the weight of the trailer kept me from stopping until the front end of the tractor was on the track. I cut the wheels to the right and tried to put the gears in reverse, but the motor died, and then I jumped just as the train hit the tractor. When I first saw the train it was about 40 to 50 feet east of the crossing and looked like it was travelling pretty fast, and when I reached the track the train was right on me. * * * I did not hear the horn blow on the train and did not hear the bell ringing. The view to the east from the north side of the crossing is obstructed until the front of the tractor was right up to the track. If I had not seen the train at the time Mr. Terry waved at me, I would have gotten all the way up on the track before the accident.”

Robert Hill’s testimony was largely corroborative of Gibson’s testimony given at the trial, though he testified that at the time Gibson stopped the tractor he was a little past the Oak tree, which this witness estimated was about 20 feet from the track, but had not passed the tractors in the vacant lot. He did not hear the train whistle, or any bell ringing.

Photographs of the locus, taken on the day following the collision were introduced into evidence by the defendant, it first being established that the tractors and farm machinery shown in the photographs were in the same positions as they were at the time of the collision.

For the defense, C. A. Turner, defendant’s station agent, testified that he saw the collision; that Gibson did not stop as he approached the crossing, and the tractor skidded 20 or 25 feet until it stopped on the track, a dark mark shown on defendant’s Exhibit being the skid mark.

Mr. Turner further testified that from a point five feet north of the track one could see more than half a mile down the track to the east, between a half and a quarter of a mile 10 feet north of the track, and a third of a mile 15 feet north of the track.

Mr. Turner further testified that between the railroad track and the vacant lot there is a drainage ditch 12 inches in depth.

Stanley Kracke for the defense testified that his attention was first attracted to the tractor because of the speed it was being driven; that he first saw the tractor when it was forty feet from the track, and it did not stop until brakes were applied and it slid onto the tracks. He heard the train running, but did not hear it blow, and did not hear any bell.

Edward Dodson testified for the defense that Gibson did not stop before reaching the track and that Gibson was standing up on the tractor when he saw him three or four feet from the track.

This witness, during the trial had measured with a steel tape certain distances, and testified that the distance from the north rail to Blythe’s store was 50 feet and six inches, and from the north rail to the drainage ditch was twelve feet, and all of the farm machinery on the vacant lot was more than twelve feet from the north rail.

Henry King and Elbert Crow each testified that Gibson did not stop the tractor before going on the track. King said his. [190]*190attention was attracted by the sounding of the locomotive horn which he heard before he could see the train.

S. M. Grider was fireman on the locomotive, but had previously qualified as an engineer for diesel locomotives. He was operating the locomotive at the time of the collision. He testified that he was keeping a lookout at the time the train approached Courtland, and was seated on the left hand or south side of the locomotive, which at the time was running in reverse. Appellant’s tractor approached from the north side. His first knowledge of the approach ■of the tractor was when G. R. Grimmett, the engineer, called “Big Hold It.” At this time the locomotive was 100 feet from the ■crossing.

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 2d 913, 40 Ala. App. 186, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-company-v-terry-alactapp-1958.