Southern Railway Company v. Willie Sula Brown Jones

228 F.2d 203, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4929
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1955
Docket19-3415
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 228 F.2d 203 (Southern Railway Company v. Willie Sula Brown Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Willie Sula Brown Jones, 228 F.2d 203, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4929 (6th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge.

The widow of Ishmael C. Jones brought an action on behalf of herself and two minor children against the appellant Southern Railway Company for damages for its negligent acts in causing the death of her husband. The jury awarded her a verdict of $40,000 and the United States District Court entered judgment thereon for that amount.

The decedent, Jones, was killed on September 19, 1953. On that date, he was in the employ of Dunn Brothers, Inc., sub-contractor under Engineering Construction Company, prime contractor with the East Tennessee Natural Gas Company which was laying a pipe line in Eastern Tennessee. Dunn Brothers was engaged in unloading pipe from freight cars brought in by the Southern Railway Company and in transporting the material to the construction site.

In the progress of laying the pipe, a place for unloading and storing had to be procured near Jefferson City, Tennessee, some thirty miles east of Knoxville. Permission was obtained from the American Zinc Company to use its privately owned (Mossy Creek) spur track, situated not far to the east of the railroad’s depot at Jefferson City. Simultaneously, land was leased from an abutting property owner for the storage of the pipe between the time it was unloaded from the freight cars and the time it was needed at the construction site. In the contract between the zinc company and *205 the Southern Railway Company, it was provided that the latter should have entire control of the industrial tracks and their operation, and might also use the tracks for the business of third persons.

Gordon Wolfe, a field man employed by the East Tennessee Natural Gas Company, went to Jefferson City two or three weeks before the fatal accident. His visit was concerned with the shipment of pipe for use in the construction of the pipe line. The first Southern Railway employee whom he met at Jefferson City was Dana Lauderback, who had worked for the Southern for 37 years, starting when he was only fourteen years old. During his entire service with the Southern he had been classified as a “trucker.” Wolfe discussed with Lau-derback possible unloading points. Two places were recommended, one of which was the spur track upon which the accident later occurred. Wolfe passed along the information to Engineering Construction Company, which thereupon leased land adjacent to the spur track for unloading purposes.

Upon instruction of the Engineering Company, the Southern “spotted” ten loaded cars at the designated place on the morning of September 10. These cars were unloaded on Saturday, September 12, when the Southern removed with a switch engine the empty cars and spotted ten additional loaded cars at the unloading point. Dunn Brothers had notified Southern that it intended to unload pipe on Sunday, September 13, and had requested that a sufficient number of loaded cars bo placed on the Mossy Creek spur above the unloading point. Dunn Brothers was advised by Southern that no switching or spotting service could be furnished on Sunday, as no switch engine or crew would be available; but, late Saturday evening, Southern filled with loaded cars the space opposite ten unloading bins and placed eight additional cars above them.

On Saturday, September 12, Herbert G. Taylor, General Superintendent of Dunn Brothers, conferred with the Southern’s Jefferson City station agent, who, in replying to Taylor’s protest that if the cars were not unloaded on Sunday demurrage would accure, said: “Well, we will help you any way we can.” He stated that Dana Lauderback, who lived on a nearby hill, could be found at his home always, that Lauderback knew quite a bit about practices around the depot and yards and would help in any way -he could. The station agent pointed to where Lauderback lived.

Of the eighteen loaded cars placed by Southern on the industrial siding, ten cars were unloaded on the morning of Sunday, September 13. While the cars were being unloaded, Lauderback came to the project site around eleven o’clock, A. M., and inquired of Kelly, crane operator of Dunn Brothers, as to when the cars then being unloaded would be ready to be moved. He was told that the cars would be ready for movement around two o’clock in the afternoon. Lauderback said that he would come back at that time and help move the cars. He kept his word and assisted in moving the ten empty cars on the industrial track so that there would be room for lowering the remaining eight cars for unloading.

Lauderback released the air brakes on the ten empty cars, then applied a railroad jack to start that cut of cars down the industrial track. To warn persons traveling on the highway, he instructed the workmen to station themselves at the highway crossing over which the railroad cars would necessarily pass. After the cut of ten empty cars had been removed, Lauderback, using a railroad jack, started two cars of the remaining eight and moved them to an appropriate place for unloading. In like manner, he moved three of the six cars left to a point some ten feet from the first two cars which had been spotted. He had been told by Kelly, the crane operator, that the last three cars would not be needed, as five cars were all that the crew could unload. Lauderback insisted that the remaining three cars should be moved from their location on the industrial siding near the main line, for the reason that the brakes might not hold *206 the cars in the position in which they were sitting and that they might roll downgrade.

Lauderback placed himself at the back brake of the last of the three cars and, according to Kelly, turned the cars loose “before we could get there.” Some of the workmen jumped upon the rolling cars, however, and unsuccessfully attempted to apply the brakes. Lauder-back jumped off before they did, according to several witnesses, although he denied that he had done so.

These last three cars, from force of gravity, moved with increasing speed, out of control, and struck the three cars which Lauderback had spotted together knocking them into the two cars farthest downgrade which he had first spotted. Appellee’s decedent was working on one of these cars farthest downgrade and, from the impact, was thrown .from the car and so severely injured that he died soon after the accident.

Twenty-six witnesses testified at the trial. To detail the testimony of only those witnesses who were at the scene of the accident would be unnecessarily cumbersome, in view of the concession of appellant that there is sufficient evidence to sustain the jury verdict that the negligence of Dana Lauderback contributed to the fatal accident. There is substantial evidence that his negligence was the proximate cause of the accident. Southern states in its brief that the “ultimate question for determination is whether the doctrine of respondeat superior is applicable so as to render appellant liable for Lauderback’s negligence.” The railroad insists that Laud-erback was not acting within either the actual or the apparent scope of his employment. .

Inasmuch as jurisdiction of this case rests upon diversity of citizenship, Tennessee must supply the governing law. In the first case which appellant cites, Goodman v. Wilson, 129 Tenn. 464, 166 S.W. 752, 51 L.R.A.,N.S., 1116, the defendants were held liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior

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Bluebook (online)
228 F.2d 203, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-railway-company-v-willie-sula-brown-jones-ca6-1955.