St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Tidmore

47 S.W.2d 16, 185 Ark. 177, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 S.W.2d 16 (St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Tidmore) 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-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Tidmore, 47 S.W.2d 16, 185 Ark. 177, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 85 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

Butler, J.

The appellee, T. M. Tidmore, was a section foreman in tbe employ of the appellant on July 8, 1930, and on that date, shortly after one o’clock in the afternoon, while engaged in the performance of his duties, was injured. The appellee brought suit for damages because of his injuries, and recovered a verdict and judgment against the appellant from which is this appeal.

The principal ground urged for reversal, and one which we think is decisive, was that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the verdict, and that the appellant’s request for a directed verdict in its favor should have been granted. The testimony most favorable to the appellee tended to establish these facts. At about one o’clock, the switch engine passed by a point about 1,600 feet south of Highway No. 70 which crossed the main track of appellant practically at right angles. At this place he was directing two negroes in cutting small trees and bushes on the right-of-way west of the passing track. The switch engine was travelling north, but its front part was directed toward the south, the engine being in reverse. Several cars were attached to this engine on the north or back end of it, and several at its front on the south. As it passed by appellee, the conductor, who was hanging* on one of the cars, gave him a sign with his hand which appellee thought was a “highball,” and supposed that it meant that the switch engine was passing out of the yards to go to a junction point called Presley about 2% miles north. At this time there were two or three cars standing on the side track or passing track about 150 or 200 feet south of where the switch enters from the main track to the passing* track just south of Highway No. 70. Further south and with an interval between them were other cars, near which the aforesaid work was being done.

Appellee watched the switch engine with its cars attached until it crossed- the highway and went on to a team track which connected with the main line by a switch a short distance north of Highway No. 70. The main track ran north and south at this point, and the passing track, immediately west of which appellee was working, ran parallel with it. From time to time appellee looked from the west between the cars toward the north. After the switch engine passed to the north, the work of cutting the timber was continued, and in this operation a sapling or small tree was felled upon one of the coal cars. Appellee directed one of the negroes to get upon top of the coal car for the purpose of dislodging the tree, and, while the negro was on the coal car, appellee asked regarding the whereabouts of the switch engine, and was told that it was near the north end of the team track about a quarter and a half (% of a mile) away. He continued to stand where he was, supposing he was in the clear and in safety when, about eight or ten minutes after the negro had descended from the coal car, the car by which appellee was standing was struck by reason of the switching operation of the cotton cars from the main line to the passing track, and moved forward, a part of which projecting about four inches to the side, in which standards were fixed, struck the appellee on the shoulder violently knocking him to the ground and injuring him severely.

Appellee stated that it had generally been the practice of men operating the engine to give him a signal when they were going to switch cars upon a track on which he might be working, and that often he would ask the train crew what time they were going to use the track, but on this occasion he did not ask them, as he was not working-on the track, but was clearing bushes on the right-of-way. The appellee was an experienced man, having* worked on the section for fourteen years, ten years of which he had been foreman. He was well acquainted with the rule that required Mm to keep a lookout for his own safety and for the safety of the men working under him. It was his duty, when worldng around any track, to be on the lookout for cars which might he moving. He was working'in the yards of the appellant in the city of West Memphis, and through these yards ran the main line from north to south. On the west of this main line and south of Highway No. 70 ran the passing track parallel with the main line. Just north of the highway a switch led from the main line to the team track, east of and parallel to the main track. The passing track was connected with the main line at a point near the depot a short distance south of Highway No. 70 by a switch and again by a switch at a point to the south of where appellee was worMng. To the right and opposite to where appellee was standing was a cotton compress, and between it and near to it was another track which was used in handling* cotton either coming in or going out of the compress. This side track was connected with the main line at a point just south of Highway No. 70l by a switch a short distance north of the switch leading into the passing track. It was also connected with the main line at two points south of the place of appellee’s injury. These tracks were used daily for switching purposes, the switch engine and crew using them several times each day in these operations. On the forenoon of the day of the accident a number of cars had been switched on to the passing track, and the train crew had seen the appellee and his crew at work on the right-of-way cutting the bushes, and they knew that he was continuing’ this work after the noon hour. About one o ’clock p. m. the switch engine entered on the track by the compress and there picked up three carloads of cotton for the purpose of moving them over to the passing track. To accomplish this, they moved down toward the south with the engine headed in that direction and pushing the cars ahead, with some attached to the rear, on to the main line, and backed north on that line past where the appellee was working, proceeding on in a northerly direction. It was necessary for them to pass entirely across Highway No. 70 in order to give clearance between the cars and the north switch so that it might be opened. From the point where that switch entered the main line to the point where the injury occurred there was a considerable down grade of perhaps four or five feet between the two points, and, when the switch engine with its cars attached passed the switch and the highway, it moved- again south and shunted the three cars o.f cotton through the switch on to the main line. A brakeman was riding one of these cars, which were moving at this time at a rate of about four or five miles per hour — a sufficient speed on account of the down -grade. No signal was given by the operatives of the switch engine that this movement would be made, and no effort was made by any of them to notify the appellee that .the cars would be switched upon the side track. The weight of the cars rolling down grade was sufficient to put the first bunch of cars on the side or passing’ track south of the switch in movement, and they together with the three cars of cotton moved down, strildng the cars near which the appellee was standing with force enough to- move them forward, resulting in the accident to the appellee.

These are the essential facts-disclosed by the testimony most favorable to the appellee -which we think fail to disclose any negligence on the part of the crew of the switch engine, but show that the accident occurred by reason of appellee’s own inattention in taking a position sufficiently near the track to be struck by a moving car, which position it was unnecessary for him to occupy in the performance of his duties.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W.2d 16, 185 Ark. 177, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-v-tidmore-ark-1932.