U.S.A.C. Transport, Inc. v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

209 F. Supp. 815, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3563
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedOctober 29, 1962
DocketCiv. Nos. 12323, 12844
StatusPublished

This text of 209 F. Supp. 815 (U.S.A.C. Transport, Inc. v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U.S.A.C. Transport, Inc. v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 209 F. Supp. 815, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3563 (D. Md. 1962).

Opinion

THOMSEN, Chief Judge.

These actions, which were consolidated for trial and were heard together by the court without a jury, arise out of a collision between a B & 0 train and a tractor-trailer unit which had “hung up” on one of the outside rails at a grade crossing because of the road’s steep approach to the tracks and the extremely low cleai-ance of the trailer, only 12 inches above the ground. The claims of the two plaintiffs (U. S. A. C. Transport and Ozmer) against the B & 0 and the B & O’s counterclaims raise questions as to the nature of the crossing, negligence, assumption of risk, contributory negli[817]*817gence, and last clear chance. The complaints also charge negligence in the construction and upkeep of the crossing on the part of the individual owners and of the corporate lessee-occupier of the premises to which the road leads.-

Facts

The B & 0 tracks running west from Rockville, Maryland, curve gently to the right. Then, about 6,000 ft. (a little more than a mile) south of the Derwood crossing, where the collision occurred, they enter a long straight stretch running north past that crossing. There are two tracks, with trees and bushes on each side of the 66 ft. right-of-way; the northbound track is on the right, the east. Three roads cross this straight stretch at grade; the first crossing is a little more than 2,000 ft. after the end of the curve, the second (the West-more crossing) nearly 2,000 ft. beyond the first, and the third (the Derwood crossing) about 2,000 ft. beyond the second. The first two are admittedly public crossings; the B & O contends that the third is a private crossing, but in its operations it treats the three alike, whistling for each. At the third crossing, with which we are concerned, cross-bar warning signs, with the legend “Railroad Crossing”, such as are usually placed at public crossings, have been erected beside the road on each side of the tracks. ■» No sign warning against trespassing or indicating that the crossing is pi'ivate has been posted by the B & O anywhere along the road, which is a dirt road leading from the highway (Md. 355, old U.S. 240 to Frederick, just west of the tracks) east across the tracks to a 58 acre parcel of land owned by the individual defendants. Part of the 58 acres is leased to the corporate defendant for a sawmill and part to another company for a junk yard. The road is used by the public visiting either the sawmill or the junk yard in their own trucks and automobiles, as well as by the proprietors and employees of those enterpx-ises.1 There is no evidence when or by whom the dirt road involved in this case was first cut through, except that the crossing appears on a B & O plat dated 1918. Nor is there any evidence when or by whom the crossing (including particularly the badly worn macadam surface between the rails and on each side of the tracks) was constructed.

The cox-porate defendant (the Taylor Company), which operated the sawmill, owned a low-boy trailer, some 32 ft. long, with a clearance of 16 inches, which had apparently negotiated the crossing from time to time without difficulty; but there is no evidence that any trailer as long (35 ft.) and as low (12 inches above the ground) as plaintiff’s trailer had ever used this crossing. I find that none of the defendants should have anticipated that such a vehicle would use the crossing. The Taylor Company employed Ozmer’s brother-in-law (Slagle) as a truck driver and general handyman. Slagle also acted as night watchman and had an arrangement with the Taylor company whereby his house trailex’, in which he and his family lived, was parked on the sawmill property. He was paid nothing extra for his services as a watchman, he paid no rent, and there was no adjustment in his salary when he moved to Rockville with his family some [818]*818months after the accident. Ozmer had spent a night in his brother-in-law’s .trailer three or four months before May-1960, and had driven his automobile across the tracks at the Derwood crossing at least four times, without difficulty. He was familiar with its character, and must have noticed the fairly steep, short approach up to the tracks on both sides. There was no significant change in'the condition of the crossing between the time of his former visit and the time of the accident.

Ozmer owned a White tractor, which cost $18,000 and which he had leased to U. S. A. C. Transport under an arrangement by which he was paid various amounts per mile, depending upon whether he was driving laden or unladen, and with or without a second driver. The parties treated four cents per mile as compensation for Ozmer’s services as a driver, and the U. S. A. C. Transport does not deny that Ozmer was its servant for the purposes of this case, since he was driving the tractor he had leased to it, hauling one of its trailers. The trailer was about 35 ft. long, with four wheels on one axle at the rear. It was of the type generally used to haul automobiles, but without a superstructure. It- had a clearance of only 12 inches; the law requires at least 11 inches.

Ozmer left Utica, Michigan, with two airplane engines loaded on the trailer, bound for Middle River, Maryland, and Wilmington, Delaware. About 3 p. m. on May 13 Ozmer arrived in the neighborhood of Frederick, Maryland, called the Martin Company, where the first engine was to be delivered, and was told that he could not reach Middle River in time to unload the engine that day but that it could be unloaded early the next morning. Ozmer then decided to depart from the direct route to Baltimore and Middle River and to spend the night with his brother-in-law, although he had a place to sleep in the tractor. Accordingly, he drove south on U.S. 240 to Rock-ville, then north on Md. 355 to the Derwood dirt road and east across the railroad tracks to his brother-in-law’s trailer, which was parked some 200 yds. beyond the tracks. Ozmer had no difficulty negotiating the crossing from west to east.

Ozmer spent the night in Slagle’s house trailer, and shortly before 6 a. m., daylight saving time, drove his tractor-trailer unit west toward the crossing. Slagle accompanied him, alighted, looked to be sure that no train was approaching, and signaled Ozmer to cross. Ozmer proceeded until the rear wheels of his tractor were on the outside rail of the southbound track, i. e. the westernmost rail, and the wheels at the rear end of the trailer were some distance east of the eastern rail of the northbound track, i. e. the easternmost rail. At that moment the unit “hung up” on the easternmost rail, and Ozmer was unable to obtain enough traction to move it although he attempted to go both forward and backward. Evidently the rear wheels of the trailer were at a steep point of the slope, within the 66 ft. right-of-way of the B & O.

Ozmer promptly got out, placed one lighted flare about 50 ft. south of the unit on a crosstie of the northbound track on the outer side of the inner rail, then placed the other lighted flare about 150 ft. north of the unit. He heard a train whistle, ran back past the crossing, picked up the flare which he had set on the crosstie of the northbound track, and ran south waving the flare over his head. The engineer says he was waving the flare up and down, but I find he was waving it horizontally. The difference is important, because to a railroad engineer horizontal waving means an emergency stop, vertical waving means caution, slow. The train, an 80-car freight train with a 4-unit diesel engine, passed Ozmer when he was 400 or 450 ft.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 F. Supp. 815, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/usac-transport-inc-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-mdd-1962.