St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Lawrence

152 S.W. 1002, 106 Ark. 32, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 320
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 1002 (St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Lawrence, 152 S.W. 1002, 106 Ark. 32, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 320 (Ark. 1912).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The appellee, Mrs. Frankie Lawrence, as administratrix of the estate of I. D. H. Lawrence, deceased, sued the appellant railway company for the benefit of herself, as his widow, and their children, who were his next of kin. The jury returned a verdict in her favor in the sum of $5,000, and the railway company appealed from the action of the court in awarding her judgment for that amount.

The complaint alleged, and the proof showed, that the deceased at the time of his death was employed by the railway company as a section foreman and that he had been employed in section work for twenty-one years preceding his .death and for the last sixteen years of that time had been a section foreman. That on January 7, 1911, while so employed he was struck and killed by an engine running at the rate of from forty-five to fifty-five miles per hour, and which had no cars attached to it.

The facts in the case stated as favorably to the plaintiff’s contention as the evidence will warrant are these: That on the day he was killed, Mr. Lawrence worked at the south end of his section which joined that of one R. L. Patterson, who was also a section foreman, and that Mr. Lawrence rode to the end of his section on his speeder, but was not accompanied by his men. Mr. Patterson borrowed this speeder and went to Benton and during his absence, Lawrence stayed with the section men, and remained there until Patterson returned, when they ate dinner together. The men working under Mr. Patterson had eaten their dinner some distance north of the place where they had been engaged in cutting over the right-of-way and they started back to their work about 1:30 P. M. walking, when Patterson called to them to take the hand car. When this order was given, the men began to execute it and while so employed, the engine, which later struck Mr. Lawrence was heard to whistle for Traskwood,a station on the line of defendant’s road. Patterson said to his men that they could go as far with their car as they wanted to go before the train passed and as Mr. Lawrence put his speeder on the track, he remarked that he, too, would go up the track a piece and set the speeder off. The men separated those on the hand car with Patterson going to the south meeting the engine while Mr. Lawrence rode away on his speeder in the direction in which the engine was. coming. Each had traveled about 500 feet, and, when they had gotten about 1,000 feet apart, they stopped and began to get the hand car and speeder from the track and both were placed entirely in the clear on the right side of the track, which was the side on which the engineer rides on his engine. Mr. Patterson crossed over to the left or the west side of the track and stood there in a place of safety, but his men stood on the right side of the track where their car was, and, as has been stated, they were 1,000 feet nearer the approaching engine than Mr. Lawrence was. Patterson’s car was removed from the track before Lawrence had succeeded in removing his speeder, but the speeder was removed entirely in the clear before the train passed, its wheels nearest the track being from four to six feet from the track. This track appears to have been level and to have had but little elevation above the ground. The work of removing the speeder was completed while the engine was a distance from the speeder, variously estimated, from three to five telegraph poles and the witnesses agreed that after removing the speeder, Lawrence stood, for some appreciable length of time, watching the approaching engine, but they differ as to the length of time during which he stood observing it. He was then seen to start from the east to the west side of the track and there was evidence which tended to show that near the center of the track or at the west rail he stooped as if to pick up something from the track and the conductor, who was riding on the seat with the engineer, testified that Lawrence went rapidly across the track and appeared to bend over as he went and that he stooped over from the outside west rail as if to pick something from the track, but that the only thing he saw between the rails, or which was found there after the train had stopped, was a leveling board, which was lying between the rails south of the body.

The engineer denied having seen anything on the track or to have noticed anything about Lawrence’s posture except that he was going rapidly across the track, and he stated that there was ample time for him to have done so, but that in any event he could not have appreciably reduced the speed of his train after Lawrence started across the track before passing the point where he had been standing. The engineer swore that when Lawrence crossed over to the left side of the track, he passed out of his view and the evidence seems to be undisputed that the engineer could not see the left-hand rail at a point less than sixty feet in front of his engine and he says that he did not know that he had struck Mr. Lawrence until the fireman called to him that he had done so. The evidence is conflicting as to whether Lawrence had safely crossed to the west side of the track. The brakeman, who was riding in the fireman’s seat and who was probably the only person who actually saw the impact, testified that Lawrence had gotten in the clear on the west side, when he turned and stooped over the rail and that he was struck as he was rising to an erect position. This statement is corroborated by the physical fact that blood and brains were found on the left end of the pilot beam and that this beam was the widest part of the engine. There was evidence, however, from which the jury might have inferred that Lawrence was between the rails and had not crossed entirely over when he was struck, and we assume this to be true. The engine which was of the largest type in the passenger service, was stopped within about one-fourth or one-half of a mile and returned to the scene of the injury, where it was found that Lawrence had been decapitated by being struck by the engine’s pilot beam. The plaintiff insists that Lawrence was reaching down to remove a track jack which weighed about thirty or forty pounds from the west rail and was just in the act of doing so when he was struck. The trainmen all deny having seen the jack either on the track or elsewhere but it appears that after the engine left the section men found the jack about fifteen or twenty feet from the track with blood and brains on it and lying north of Lawrence’s body. The plaintiff insists that the jack was in a position on the track to endanger the safety of the engine and the persons riding on it, or at least that it so appeared to the deceased in the emergency under which he was called upon to act; and a number of instructions were given defining the law where one acts in an emergency to save life or property. There was also much evidence offered on the part of plaintiff by engineers claiming to be experts in the operation of trains, defining the duty of an engineer to persons on the track, and the distance in which a train might be stopped at given rates of speed, and a number of instructions were given defining the law of that situation. In our view of this case it is unnecessary to review this evidence or to discuss these instructions.

The proof does not show anything about the position of the jack and it is only by inference that the jury might have found that it was on the track and in a position to endanger the safety of the engine and its occupants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 1002, 106 Ark. 32, 1912 Ark. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-co-v-lawrence-ark-1912.