Southern Ry. Co. v. Smith

137 So. 398, 223 Ala. 583, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 523
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 8, 1931
Docket6 Div. 637.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 So. 398 (Southern Ry. Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Ry. Co. v. Smith, 137 So. 398, 223 Ala. 583, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 523 (Ala. 1931).

Opinion

FOSTER, J.

Plaintiff’s intestate was the foreman of a bridge crew in the service of defendant engaged in interstate commerce. He was killed in a head-on collision between his motorcar and traiji No. 664, between stations Cordova and 'America Junction. The roadway between those stations was a “block,” according to the system of defendant. America Junction was about five miles west of Cordova. The motorcar was traveling west from Cordova, train No. 664, east from America Junction, and the collision occurx-ed nearly midway between them. There was a telegraph operator at each station. No. 664 was an engine operated as a train and so called, and was allowed by the operator at America Junction on orders from the dispatcher to follow train No. 62 into the block ten minutes later, both going east toward Cordova. Before leaving America Junction by train No. -62, the operator there had secured information from the Cordova operator that there was nothing in the block going west from there. This was about 1:46 or 1:48, whereupon train 62 started its course east in the block. At about 1:30 and before No. 62 was by America Junction, plaintiff’s witness Stallworth, who was then the operator at Cordova, but who. was discharged soon after the collision, testified that decedent came into his office at Cordova and asked him “to find out from the dispatcher if there were any trains between 62 and 58”; that he asked the dispatcher by telegraph if there would be any.trains between 62 and 58, and he said there would be none; and that he communicated this information to decedent. They then discussed the question of whether 62 would reach Cordova by 2 p. m., so that if he left afterwards he could reach Parrish, his destination, before 58 reached there also going east behind 62. Deceased then ran his motorcar down the track to the end of the siding a mile or more, apparently to wait for 62 to come in, and then went on his course. At 1:56, ten minutes after 62 left America Junction going east, the operator at that station notified 'Stallworth at Cordova that 664 had entered the block, behind 62. Cordova station knew nothing of 664 until then, and the operator had not asked for clearance, but he permitted the entrance of 664 on orders of the dispatcher, which was permissible under the rules when there was another train in the same block going in the same direction, for the rules prohibited the operator at Cordova to permit a train going west until after 62 had passed, and he had received clearance from America Junction. So that the entrance of 664 into the block after 62 had gone in and before he had given Cordova a block clearance, and on orders of the dispatcher, was pursuant to the regulations. The motorcar of deceased proceeded west from the end of the switch, meeting 664, after 62 had gone by, and the collision occurred. As soon as the operator at Cordova learned of the approach of 664, he sent a telephone call, which automatically rang all the ’phone booths in the block, in order to stop decedent, or 664, if he could, but failed to get *587 word to either of them. The dispatcher denied that Stallworth had asked him about trains running between Nos. 62 and 5S. But testified that he knew about No. 664 and gave the order for it to leave America Junction at 1:56, and that if Stallworth had asked him the question he would have told him about No. 664. So that, as to whether such messages passed, the evidence was in sharp conflict.

But defendant claims that Stallworth had no authority to make the request as he did, nor give it thus to deceased, neither did deceased have authority to make a request, except for written information. And that deceased should have requested a “written lineup” for his information. The meaning of this is thus explained by Stallworth:

“When a written line up was requested that would be in writing and signed by the chief dispatcher. That would be telegraphed to the operator with the dispatcher’s name also telegraphed. When there is a message for a written line up, that actual message would come from the dispatcher; it would come telegraphed and I would copy it down like the dispatcher sent it. The message would also have affixed to it the signature of the chief dispatcher. He would telegraph his signature. It would have his name to it', and I would put it there of course. I would write down what the dispatcher told me, including the chief dispatcher’s name, and in case of a written line up I would give that to Mr. Smith. I didn’t do that on this occasion, and Mr. Smith didn’t request any such line-up. As a matter of fact when I talked to the operator I just asked him what Mr. Smith asked me to ask him; I didn’t tell him that that information was wanted for a line up. I didn’t inform the dispatcher that the information I asked for was wanted for a line up for the motor ear. As a matter of fact I didn’t tell the dispatcher that Mr. Smith was at Cordova with his motor car,” and continuing he said:
“The only way to get a line up from the dispatcher in writing was over the telegraph and I did that. * * * I got it the only way that I would have gotten it from the dispatcher, unless he put it in message form. If he put it in message form I would have written it out. * * * I wouldn’t change the wording. * * * If there had been any writing I would have written it and if I had written it the same information would have been given Edward H. Smith the afternoon he was killed, that was given him.”

And by Truss, the dispatcher, as follows: “He did not get any written line up from me. Written line ups are given in message form, written in the form of a message. That would be entered on the book not on the sheet. If it is a Witten line up we make a report. A train order is written up in the train order-book. The difference between a train order and a written line up, a train order is put on form 19 and form 31 and a number used for them, a written line Up, as written out, looks like a message with no number on them. The written line up is written with no number. The train order directs the train to go to a particular point and proceed no further. A written line up carries the location of trains concerning that particular movement which he wants. In a written line up we merely give the movement of trains, of the time they are supposed to arrive there. A written line up is addressed to the man asking it. The written lineup comes to who ever wants it in the form of a message addressed to him and carries the location of trains supposed to be at stations at that time. The operator of a motor car is not given instructions to proceed to a given point and wait for trains, he uses that line up in proceeding himself. He can go forward to any point he want to go to. They are given directions for their movements. No written line up was gotten from me by Mr. Smith. I was the only man that could give a written line up for that part of the line Mr, Smith was on, and I didn’t do it.”

Defendant also claimed that the rules by which the operator and dispatcher were required to inform deceased as to the movements of trains were 5 and 6, which are as follows:

“5. The user of a car, working within restricted limits, before starting in or returning from work, or while the car is on main track, must take proper measures for safety, obtaining information in writing from train dispatcher when possible as to location of trains in that territory.”

“6.

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Related

Dowler v. New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad
125 N.E.2d 41 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1955)
Dowler v. NY, C. & ST. LRR CO.
125 N.E.2d 41 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1955)
Parrish v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
221 N.C. 292 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1942)
Parrish v. . R. R.
20 S.E.2d 299 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
137 So. 398, 223 Ala. 583, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-ry-co-v-smith-ala-1931.