Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Hayes

9 Tenn. App. 116, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 222
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 1, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 116 (Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Hayes, 9 Tenn. App. 116, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 222 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

The Tennessee Central Railway Company has appealed in error from a judgment, based upon the verdict of a jury, against it for $5000 in favor of William H. Hayes, as damages for *118 personal injuries sustained by Hayes from collision between an automobile truck being driven by him and a train of the company, at the crossing of Taylor street over the railway track of the company, in the City of Nashville.

The casualty occurred between the hours of ten and eleven on the morning of May 25, 1927. Plaintiff Hayes had for nearly seven months been employed by Jacobs Brothers Packing Company driving a delivery truck. Prior to that time he had been engaged in the same capacity in the employment of another packing company. He had had an experience of about seven years in driving tracks and other automobiles and during that time had been accustomed to crossing the railroad tracks at the place of the accident very frequently. Taylor street runs east and west beginning at Adams street which runs north and south and parallel with First avenue, and one block east of it. The Jacobs Brothers Packing Company’s platform where the truck was loaded on tbe day of the accident is located on the south side of Taylor street at its corner with Adams street. From that place Taylor street extends westwardly from Adams street and crosses First avenue. Plaintiff Hayes drove the truck about a block until he reached the railroad crossing going along the north side of Taylor street. The defendant’s train composed of an engine and nine freight cars was going northwardly on its track running along the west side of First avenue. The engine was pushing the cars and the front car was an oil tank car. The right hand comer of the front car struck the left side of the truck, lifted it somewhat and turned it over on the other side of the track and one of the plaintiff’s legs was very badly broken.

On First avenue running northwardly from toward the center of the street Avere tAvo parallel railway tracks, one on the east being that of the L. & N. Railroad Company, and the other being that of defendant Tennessee Central Railway Company. The distance from the east rail of the L. & N. track to the Avest rail is four feet nine inces; from the west rail of the L-. & N. track to the east rail of the Tennessee Central track is eight feet nine inches. Thus the total distance from the east rail of the L. & N. track to east rail of the Tennessee Central track is thirteen feet six inches. Of course the plaintiff had first to cross the L. &■ N. track before he could go upon the Tennessee Central track. At the southeast corner of these two streets was the warehouse and mill of a lumber company, and immediately Avest of it and along the extreme side of First avenue was a-storage track or siding, at the end of which stood a freight car projecting about four feet into Taylor street, that is to about the sidewalk line and constituting an obstruction to the vision until a traveler would come to a point about ten feet east of the L. & N. track. The plaintiff testified that there Avere also one or more freight cars on the L. & N. track somewhere south of Taylor street, which further obstructed his *119 vision. About fifty feet from the L. & N. track plaintiff stopped, listened and heard nothing to indicate that a train was approaching. Then about ten feet from the east rail of the L. &. N. track he again stopped. This point was twenty-three feet six inches from the east rail of the Tennessee Central track. Plaintiff testified that he could not see any train approaching until he was about four feet from the east rail of the L. &. N. track; that he was driving at the rate of about five to seven miles an hour; that when he saw the train he was perhaps a foot or two east of the L. & N. track, having driven 8 or 9. feet since he made his second stop. He said that he did not think that he could stop his truck so as to avoid a collision. In describing the situation presented when he saw the train he said, “The only thing I thought of then was to cut for the corner of the curb and try to beat it across and it hit me in the back of my truck along about Avhere my rear fender couples on to the running board.”

This crossing was in a thickly settled portion of the city having many residences and manufacturing plants. Tt- was much frequented by people on foot and in wagons, trucks and other automobiles passing and re-passing at all times of the day, and their presence should have been expected there at any time.

The suit is based upon the alleged negligence at common law, of the defendant Railway Company. The declaration originally contained three counts but one of these was abandoned. In the first count relied on it is averred that in the operation of its cars and trains on the public streets and highways of the City of Nashville where people and vehicles are most of the time passing, the Railway Company is required to exercise great care and caution not to run over and injure people lawfully using- said streets and highways; and that on the aforesaid day while the plaintiff was driving the truck crossing First avenue, in the exercise of due care, the defendant through its agents and employees carelessly, negligently and without notice or warning backed a train of box or freight cars into, upon and against him, seriously injuring him. In the second count relied on it is averred that at this grade crossing there were box cars and buildings that cut off and obscured from the plaintiff the view of an approaching car or train of cars and these facts and conditions were well known to defendant, its agents, servants and employees; that these obstructions to the view, making this blind corner an exceedingly dangerous crossing, were not created by the plaintiff nor were they under his control; that while traveling Taylor street at a low rate of speed and using due care and caution for his own safety, and when one or more box or freight cars were standing on the railroad track on First avenue, and not knowing that cars were backed across Taylor street, no notice or warning to that effect having been given, plaintiff started to drive his truck across First avenue, which he honestly thought he could do in reasonable safety,' but just as his *120 truck was about across and over the track it was struck with terrific force by a heavy freight car which defendant backed north upon another track, moving at a rapid and dangerous rate of speed for that place, under all existing circumstances, conditions and surroundings; that at this place the defendant was operating the box or freight cars backward -with gross carelessness and great negligence, wantonly and recklessly, and at an excessive, dangerous rate of speed over a public street in the corporate limits of a large city, where it should have anticipated and expected the presence of people at all times, without having the cars under reasonable control, and without exercising proper care to avoid accident and injuries. It is further averred that there was no person flagging said crossing at the time of this collision, nor was any warning or signal of any kind given to the plaintiff of the approaching danger; and that as a direct and proximate result of the said reckless, negligent and unlawful acts of the defendant, its agents and servants, the plaintiff received personal injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 116, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-central-railway-co-v-hayes-tennctapp-1928.