Townsend v. Missouri Pac. R. Co.

113 So. 130, 163 La. 872, 54 A.L.R. 538, 1927 La. LEXIS 1722
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 25, 1927
DocketNo. 28361.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 113 So. 130 (Townsend v. Missouri Pac. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townsend v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 113 So. 130, 163 La. 872, 54 A.L.R. 538, 1927 La. LEXIS 1722 (La. 1927).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

In the month of July, 1923, a Ford truck driven by plaintiff, with one D. C. Reid, as an occupant, was struck by a cut of gondola cars of the defendant company at a crossing over one of its spur or switch tracks. As a result of the accident the occupants of the truck were seriously injured. They instituted separate suits for damages, plaintiff for $20,000, and Reid for $5,000. The suits were consolidated for the purpose of trial in the district court, and resulted in judgment in favor of the present plaintiff for $6,000 and in favor of Reid as prayed for. On appeal to the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit, both judgments were set aside, one judge dissenting, and the demands of plaintiffs were dismissed. Pending their applications for a rehearing, one of the concurring judges died, and upon the selection and qualification of his successor the applications were granted.

On the rehearing, the court found that' the defendant company was guilty‘of negligence, and that Reid, the idle occupant of the car, was not negligent, and reduced the award of the district court in his favor from $5,000 to $4,000, and, as thus reduced, affirmed the judgment. In the other case, the court held that notwithstanding the negligence of the defendant company, the plaintiff was himself guilty of contributory negligence, and it reinstated its former decree.

This court refused a writ applied for by the defendant company in the Reid Case, and granted the writ applied for by plaintiff in this case, which, in consequence of our order, we are now called upon to review.

The facts appearing in the record show that the accident occurred in Tioga, a village of approximately 500 people, in the parish of Rapides. The main line of the defendant railroad company runs north and south through the center of the village. All the property east of and contiguous to the *875 railroad right of way is owned and used by the Leé Lumber Company.

About 440 feet north of where the accident happened, a switch track designated as the “government track” branches off from the east side of the main railroad line and enters the property of the lumber company. About 50 feet further westward is another spur traqk which branches off from the “government track,” and is known as “Missouri Pacific No. 1.” Prom the west side of this second spur track a third spur track branches off, and is called “Missouri Pacific No. 2.” Both of these spur tracks run in the same general direction as the “government track” and the main line of the railroad company.

On the property of the lumber company and between the “government track” and track “No. 1,” there stood an icehouse and a meat market (the latter torn down at the time of the trial). North of these buildings and across an alley 20 feet wide a barber shop is located. About 200 feet north of the north side of this barber shop a public highway, constructed and maintained by the parish, runs east and west, crossing all the trackage of the defendant coinpany. From this highway, at a point approximately 100 feet east of the “government” spur track, an open road branches off at- right angles and runs south in front of the lumber company’s office and towards the barber shop and icehouse. Opposite those buildings this roadway divides, one branch continuing southward to the sawmill, and the other turning westward and crossing the “government” spur track. Just after crossing this track, the roadway divides again, one of its branches continuing westward into the alley between the barber shop and the icehouse, and the other running southward, then around the south end of the icehouse, and then westward to the depot on the main line of the defendant company. The road and crossing in question here are not public in the sense that they are a parish highway or village street and a highway crossing or street crossing, but they are public in the sense that they are used by pedestrians and vehicles at ail hours of the day, to the knowledge of the employees of the defendant company.

The truck which the plaintiff was driving was owned by the lumber company, and ■was used by him for the delivery of ice, for which he was employed. On the day of the accident, plaintiff, as was his daily custom, drove his truck into the alley between the barber shop and the icehouse in order to obtain ice for delivery to the patrons of his employer. In doing this it was necessary for ■him to cross the “government” spur track. After loading the ice on the truck, he attempted to back his truck out the way he • had driven in. This was the usual and only manner in which it was possible for him to emerge from the alley. This alley, as heretofore stated, was formed by the south side of the barber shop and the north side of the icehouse, and a small building, since removed, located just east of the ice-house. The southeast corner of the barber shop is 30 feet from the west. rail of the track at the crossing, and the northeast corner of the small building referred to was 17 feet from the rail. Extending out 6 feet west of the west rail of the track is a plank approach to the crossing.

Plaintiff backed his truck until its rear wheels rested against the west edge of the lfiank approach. Here he stopped, and, without “killing” the engine, looked up and down the track, i-lis view up the track, with the exception of a distance of approximately 83 feet, was obstructed by the northeast corner of the barber shop. But the place where he stopped was as near the track as it was practical for him to stop before attempting to pass over the crossing. Neither seeing nor *877 hearing the approaching ears, he proceeded to back the truck up the plank approach and across the track at a speed of about 2 miles an hour. When the rear wheels of the truck reached the east, or far, rail of the track, it was struck just behind the driver’s seat by the gondola ears in question. These cars, 'six in number, were part of a train of cars, consisting of one box car, three flat cars, and the six gondola cars, drawn by a locomotive. Wishing to place these cars at certain points on the three switch tracks hereinbefore referred to, the employees of the company worked the train to a point on the main track where the south end of the rear car, which was a box car, was north of the “government” switch track. Then, simultaneously, with one movement of the locomotive, a “kick back” or “flying switch” was executed, sending the box car down the main line, the three flat cars down track No. 2, and the six gondola ears down the “government” track, and over the crossing where the accident took place.

There was a- brakeman at each of the switches to throw the switch. One of these got on the flat cars for the purpose of stopping them at the right place on the mill track. The brakeman who threw the switch where the mill track branches off from the “government” track, after sending the gondola cars down the latter track, walked back in the direction from which the cars were coming, and boarded the rear end of the rear car, where he was when the collision happened. It appears that the south end of the track in question runs up grade, and the switchman followed these cars in order to set the brakes at the proper time in order to prevent the cars from rolling backwards. There was no one on the forward car, and the brakeman on the rear end of the string of ears did not see the accident. Neither was there a flagman at the crossing.

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Bluebook (online)
113 So. 130, 163 La. 872, 54 A.L.R. 538, 1927 La. LEXIS 1722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-missouri-pac-r-co-la-1927.