Walker v. CSX Transportation, Inc.

650 F.3d 1392, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17452, 2011 WL 3658459
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 22, 2011
Docket10-14136
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 650 F.3d 1392 (Walker v. CSX Transportation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. CSX Transportation, Inc., 650 F.3d 1392, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17452, 2011 WL 3658459 (11th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

I.

A.

This negligence suit under Georgia law stems from an injury Roland Walker suffered as he unloaded freight from a railcar in July 2005. At that time, Walker worked for Exel, Inc., the operator of a shipping and receiving facility in Fairburn, Georgia, 1 which exclusively receives deliveries of food products from Unilever Bestfoods of North America (“Unilever”) on behalf of local Fairburn businesses. On July 22, the railcar arrived at Exel loaded with fifty-six pallets of containers of Unilever-produced mayonnaise that Unilever had loaded and shipped from its Chicago facility. The railcar was delivered by rail carrier CSX Transportation, Inc. (“CSX”); 2 the car was, however, the property of another rail carrier, Norfolk Southern Railway Company and Norfolk Southern Corporation (collectively, “Norfolk Southern”). 3

*1394 The railcar was equipped with two interior bulkhead doors, or “interior load divider partitions,” that allowed the car to be divided into three sections — a center compartment and two side compartments — for the organized loading of freight. 4 The bulkhead doors, each weighing 1,000 pounds, were suspended from the railcar’s interior ceiling by a carriage assembly that rolled along a parallel set of ceiling and floor tracks that ran the length of the railcar. To load and unload one of the side compartments behind a bulkhead door, an individual would move the door back and forth within the railcar along the door’s track system by squeezing a handle, or “release latch,” in the center of the door, which would cause four spring-loaded “locking pins,” one in each of the door’s corners, to retract from receptacles in the lower and upper tracks along which the door operated. Once the locking pins were disengaged, the door could be pushed or pulled freely along its tracks. Thus, when a side compartment of the railcar was loaded with cargo, a bulkhead door would be operated in this way and positioned tightly against the cargo to hold it securely in place during transit. The door would then be locked against the cargo by releasing the door’s latch, causing the spring-loaded locking pins to extend back into the track receptacles 5 — the tracks contained numerous receptacles, allowing the bulkhead door to be locked throughout most of the railcar. In turn, to unload the compartment behind a locked bulkhead door, an individual would squeeze the door’s release latch to retract the locking pins, allowing the door to be pushed or pulled down the tracks and away from the stored cargo.

Exel assigned employee Rodney Thomas to unload the pallets of mayonnaise containers from the railcar. Thomas commenced the unloading process by opening the railcar’s exterior door, at which time he discovered that the pallets Unilever had loaded in the car’s center compartment— sixteen in total — had shifted during transit. As a result, Thomas, prior to unloading the pallets, took photographs to evidence the load shift, anticipating that a claim for loss of product might later arise. He then unloaded the pallets using a forklift.

After that, Thomas sought to unload the pallets loaded in the side compartments behind the two interior bulkhead doors; twenty pallets were loaded behind each door. When Thomas squeezed the doors’ release latches, however, he discovered that the doors’ locking systems were “jammed,” that is, that their locking pins would not easily retract from the receptacles in the ceiling tracks. Thomas then saw Walker working nearby, so he asked Walker if he would assist him in opening the doors; Walker agreed to help and entered the railcar. 6 The two men then proceeded to try to disengage one of the doors: Thomas moved the release latch back and forth in an attempt to loosen it, while Walker grabbed onto the door’s frame and pulled.

Soon the bulkhead door’s locking pins retracted. Once that happened, however, the door rushed forward at Walker and Thomas. As it was later discovered, as with the center compartment, several of the pallets of mayonnaise containers loaded behind the door had shifted during *1395 transport, causing ten to twelve of the pallets — weighing between 18,000 and 22,-000 pounds 7 — to fall against the door and to propel the door forward along its tracks. Thomas immediately released the door’s latch, yet the locking pins did not extend back into the track receptacles, and the door continued to charge rapidly at the two men. Thomas, who was positioned near the railcar’s exterior door, quickly jumped from the car, but Walker was not able to do so and was struck by the bulkhead door. The door’s force then drove Walker into the other interior door, pinning him between the two. 8

Paramedics eventually released Walker from the doors’ clasp, but only after Thomas and other Exel coworkers had removed the fallen pallets of mayonnaise containers from behind the door in order to push the door back along its tracks. As a result of his crushing accident, Walker suffered severe injuries to his shoulder, chest, and leg, all of which required extensive medical care and treatment. 9

B.

On June 11, 2007, Walker sued CSX for negligence; 10 he subsequently amended his complaint on June 29, 2007, to add Norfolk Southern as a defendant. 11 In his amended complaint, Walker claimed that Norfolk Southern and CSX (collectively, “Defendants”) were jointly and severally liable for his injury in negligence, and he sought compensatory damages. Walker alleged that Defendants had not regularly *1396 inspected and maintained the interior bulkhead door’s locking system prior to his injury, despite having had multiple opportunities to do so when the car had been in their possession. These omissions were negligent, Walker asserted, because regular inspections and maintenance of the door were required under Georgia common law and various rules and guidelines issued by the Association of American Railroads (the “AAR”), a private railroad-industry trade association to which Defendants belong. Moreover, this negligence, Walker claimed, had caused his injury, since reasonably discoverable and curable defects in the door’s locking system — which Walker’s complaint characterized as a “safety mechanism” — had kept the locking system from functioning properly at the time of his injury. According to Walker, had the locking system worked as intended and not been defective, it would have averted his injury by bringing the door to a dead stop once Thomas released the door’s latch.

1.

To corroborate his allegations as to the cause of his injury, Walker, during discovery, retained a putative railcar expert named Michael Micek. 12

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
650 F.3d 1392, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17452, 2011 WL 3658459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-csx-transportation-inc-ca11-2011.