The Pennsylvania Railroad Company, a Pennsylvania Corporation v. Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad Company, an Indiana Corporation

261 F.2d 939, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3377
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1958
Docket12352_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 261 F.2d 939 (The Pennsylvania Railroad Company, a Pennsylvania Corporation v. Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad Company, an Indiana Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Pennsylvania Railroad Company, a Pennsylvania Corporation v. Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad Company, an Indiana Corporation, 261 F.2d 939, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3377 (7th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

SCHNACKENBERG, Circuit Judge.

The Pennsylvania Railroad Company, plaintiff, sued Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad Company, defendant, under the indemnity and contribution provisions of an agreement between them for the joint use of certain tracks and right of way belonging to plaintiff, to recover expenses incurred and disbursements made by plaintiff in the defense, appeal and settlement of a lawsuit arising out of an accident occurring at the crossing of said tracks and right of way over 106th Street, in Chicago.

The case at bar was tried before the court sitting without a jury. A finding and a judgment were entered for defendant from which judgment this appeal has been taken.

The lawsuit was brought by Miriam Uzdzinski, in an Illinois state court, against plaintiff herein. On September 25, 1950, she was a passenger on a motorcycle proceeding easterly on 106th street and was accidentally injured by coming into contact with a crossing gate which was being lowered.

At all times relevant herein there was in force and effect said agreement between the parties to this case (originally executed by their predecessors) which included the following:

“3. In addition to the rental as above provided, each of the companies agrees to pay its proportion of the cost of operation and maintenance of said demised railroad and appurtenances; taxes and assessments on the demised property to be regarded as part of the expenses of operation and maintenance. The rental and expenses so to be paid by all parties using the demised railroad and appurtenances shall be paid by each party in the proportion that the car mileage of each party using the demised property bears to the car mileage of all parties using the demised property (it being understood that each engine shall count as two cars), and payment of said rental and expenses shall be made monthly upon draft of proper accounting officer, on or before the twenty-fifth day of each month succeeding the month for which bills for the proper proportion of said rental and of said expenses shall be presented. 1 *******
*941 “6. The trains of the various parties making use of the demised railroad and appurtenances shall be operated under the rules and regulations of * * * [plaintiff].” 2

In the following excerpts from paragraph 8 of said agreement, the word “plaintiff” is substituted for each reference to party of the first part, and the word “defendant” is substituted for each reference to parties of the second and third parts, who are defendant’s predecessors.

The first sentence of paragraph 8 reads:

“ * * * defendant * * * assume [s] all risk of loss, damage, or expense that may be inflicted upon * * * [it] * * * or in respect to * * * [its] * * * employes, passengers, or the property of other parties under * * * [its] * * * control, arising from any act or omission on the part of any officer, agent, or employe of * * * plaintiff * * * or the employes of * * * defendant * * * while on the track system, a right of joint use of which is hereby demised, and shall and will during the continuance of this agreement, save and keep the * * * plaintiff * * * harmless from any and all claims, demands, loss, or damage on account thereof.”

The second sentence of paragraph 8 reads:

“ * * * defendant * * * hereby * * * assume [s] all risk and all liability for injury or damage to persons, * * * caused by * * * [its] trains, cars, or locomotives, by reason of or growing out of * * * jjjg faiiure to erect * * * gates, * * * at * * * street crossings in compliance with law, * * * or the erection or construction of * * * gates, * * * which do not fully conform to law, and * * * defendant shall and will * * * save and keep * * * plaintiff harmless from any and all claims, demands, loss or damage on account thereof: * *

The third sentence of pargraph 8 reads:

“ * * * defendant * * * agrees that in case any action * * shall be commenced by any party * * * against the plaintiff growing out of any such damage or injury as aforesaid, said * * * plaintiff may give written notice of the same to said * * * defendant and thereafter said * * * defendant shall attend to the defence of the same, and save and hold harmless said * * * plaintiff from all expenses, counsel fees, costs, liabilities, disbursements, recoveries, judgments and executions in any manner growing out of, pertaining to or connected therewith.”

The complete text of paragraph 8 appears in a footnote. 3

*942 In her suit against the present plaintiff, Mrs. Uzdzinski charged, inter alia, that she had been injured by reason of the alleged negligent failure of plaintiff herein properly to construct, maintain and operate the gates at the 106th street crossing. 4

It is our opinion that the first sentence of paragraph 8 has no application to this case. It is limited to loss, damage or expense inflicted upon defendant or in respect to its employees, passengers, or the property of other parties under its control.

As to the second sentence of paragraph 8, we find no ambiguity in its language. We do consider controlling the language thereof which imposes on defendant risk and liability for injury or damage to persons and property caused by its trains, cars, or locomotives. On this subject our views coincide with those of the district court expressed in the following paragraphs of its opinion, which we adopt: 5

“Examined in the light of the fair and reasonable meaning of the writing considered as a whole, the sentence does not make the defendant a general liability insurer for the plaintiff with respect to all injury or damage which may occur from whatever source. Its import is more narrow and more precise. The clause constitutes rather a declara *943 tion that in obtaining the right to use this right of way, the defendant must take it as he finds it, and that a loss caused by the defendant’s train cannot be cast upon the plaintiff because of any defect or shortcoming in the leased premises.
“Still the defendant’s duty to indemnify arises only when the injury has been ‘caused’ by its trains. To meet this requirement, plaintiff relies upon the stipulation of the parties that one of the crew members on the defendant’s train would, if called, testify that the engine bell was not rung and the whistle not sounded as the train approached the crossing. It is claimed that these omissions ‘caused’ the injury to Mrs. Uzdzinski, since an audible warning of the approaching train would have given warning, too, that the gates would be lowered. It was also stipulated, however, that another member of the crew of defendant’s train would testify, if called as a witness, that the warning bell on the watchman’s gate house, specifically designed to warn travelers that the gates will be lowered, was rung.

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261 F.2d 939, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-pennsylvania-railroad-company-a-pennsylvania-corporation-v-indiana-ca7-1958.