Tallman v. Reading Company

177 A. 228, 117 Pa. Super. 148, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 391
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 12, 1934
DocketAppeal 345
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 177 A. 228 (Tallman v. Reading Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tallman v. Reading Company, 177 A. 228, 117 Pa. Super. 148, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 391 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Plaintiff recovered a verdict in the sum of $2,000 as damages for the death of her husband, George M. Tallman, in a collision between a truck, of which he was the driver, and a passenger train of the defendant company at a point where Miller’s Lane crosses its tracks, at grade, in Lycoming County. Defendant did not ask for a new trial but moved for judgment in its favor n. o. v. After argument before the court below, in banc, that tribunal, upon a review of the whole record, concluded that “no negligence of the defendant was proven under any of the charges made, and, further, that plaintiff’s decedent was guilty of contributory negligence; ’ ’ from the judgment then entered for the defendant we have this appeal by the plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s statement of claim contained six specifications of negligence; some of them were disproved by the evidence of her own witnesses and others were abandoned at the trial. As we understand the record, her claim to recover was finally based upon the contention that the truck stalled upon the crossing and that defendant’s engineman should have seen it standing on the crossing “sufficiently far ahead to make stopping possible.”

With a few exceptions, the facts were uncontroverted. Miller’s Lane, a public highway running north and south, crosses three tracks of the defend *150 ant company at right angles and at grade. These tracks, running east and west (south and north in railroad parlance), were level and straight for a distance of approximately a quarter of a mile west of the crossing and a much longer distance east thereof. The crossing was protected by flashing beacons and danger signals on each side. Tallman was employed by the Faxon Lumber Company at its yards, located upon the south side of the railroad tracks and about 300 feet east of the crossing. From the yards a private driveway extends westwardly along the south side of the tracks, and at a grade about three feet below them, out to Miller’s Lane. This driveway enters Miller’s Lane at a point some 20 feet south of the first track— referred to by railroad employes as the southbound track.

About noon on a clear day, October 6,1930, Tallman drove a truck of his employer westwardly along the driveway into Miller’s Lane; he turned north upon that highway and had proceeded upon the crossing to such an extent that the front portion of his truck was either upon or just across the southern rail of the first track when it was struck by one of defendant’s passenger trains proceeding eastwardly on that track. It was a regular passenger train and running on time; the engineman had given warning of its approach by whistle blasts sounded at a proper distance.

At a point 550 feet west of the crossing defendant’s tracks are carried over Miller’s run by a trestle bridge, referred to throughout the testimony as the “gut” bridge.

The evidence for plaintiff was conflicting with respect to the distance the train traveled beyond the crossing after the accident. One of her witnesses fixed this point at a telegraph pole “right below [the Faxon office];” another said, “I imagine the engine was about down to the Faxon office.” Other witnesses for *151 plaintiff estimated the distance from two car lengths to 400 feet.

The chief eye witness called by plaintiff was 0. A. McKinney, a track walker, who testified that he was filling a switch light opposite the eastern end of the Faxon building when his attention was attracted by the whistle of the approaching train. Excerpts from his testimony read:

“Q. Did you see the train which struck George Tallman? A. Yes. Q. "What attracted your attention to it? A. The whistle. Q. Did the train whistle? A. Yes. Q. Did you look up at that time?1 A. Yes, I was stooped over picking up my tools when the whistle drawed my attention. Q. Where did you see the train? A. Well, now, that is pretty hard for me to judge, looking at it in the face of a train like that, it is quite a distance away.......Q. Do you know where the train was when the whistle blew? A. Well, it whistled before I looked up and when I looked up it was whistling yet. Q. Where was it then? A. As near as I could judge he might have started to whistle on the turn, because it is not far from the gut bridge and he was whistling yet when I looked up. Q. Where was he with reference to the gut bridge? A. Pretty close to it. Q. In other words, he was almost to the gut bridge? A. As near as I could judge. Q. Now this gut bridge you speak of, what do you mean by that? A. It is a trestle bridge above the crossing. ...... Q. From the bridge to the Miller’s Lane crossing is the track straight or curved? A. You mean,— Q. The railroad track? A. The railroad track,—it is straight. Q. West of the gut bridge how is it? A. It is straight for a distance up to the turn........ Q. Now, Mr. McKinney, at the time you looked up, did you see this truck in which Mr. Tallman was riding? A. Yes, I did. Q. Where was it when you saw it? A. It looked to me, from my distance away, it looked to *152 me as though his front wheel was just over the outside rail, as near as I could judge from the distance I was away. Q. By ‘over the rail,’ you mean it had crossed one rail of the south bound track? A. It might have been right on it, or just over it. I wouldn’t say from the distance I was away from it. Q. And you have said it looked to be just over it?' A. Yes. Q1. Was it standing still, or in motion, at the time you saw it? A. Standing still. Q. Could you see the operator of the truck? A. No, I could not. Q. Could you see what he was doing?' A. No, I didn’t.”

The engineman of the train, G. W. Davis, when called by plaintiff, testified that when crossing the gut bridge the train, consisting of an engine, tender and three coaches, was running about 40 or 45 miles an hour. There was evidence for the plaintiff by an experienced engineman that a train of this length, proceeding at that speed along a level track, could be brought to an emergency stop within a distance of from 450 to 500 feet.

The testimony of the engineman, when called by the defendant, was that he began to blow the whistle at “the whistle board” located west of the bridge. With relation to the circumstances under which the collision occurred, his testimony reads:

“Q. When did you first see the automobile, or truck, that was hit by your engine that day? A. The first sight I got of the automobile, or the truck, was when it was coming on the crossing probably three or four feet away from the crossing when I saw it come up on the crossing and stop. Q. Where was your engine at that time? A. I judge from about 75, between 75 and 100, yards, north [west] of the crossing. Q. What did you do? A. Well, as soon as I see what was happening, I put the brake on, on the emergency, and got myself back so as a piece of the truck or whatever might fly would not hit me. Q. How far did your train *153 go after you put on the emergency brakes? A- A little over a car length, between a car length and a car and a half south of the crossing. Q. Below the crossing? A. Yes. Q. What distance was that from where you put on the emergency brake? A. I could not rightly say what that distance would be, it may have been 400 feet or a little more, 450. Q. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
177 A. 228, 117 Pa. Super. 148, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tallman-v-reading-company-pasuperct-1934.