Watson v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

287 F.2d 662
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1961
DocketNos. 14192, 14193
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 287 F.2d 662 (Watson v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 287 F.2d 662 (6th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Chief Judge.

These are appeals by Harry Watson and Maggie Watson, husband and wife, from judgments of the district court in consolidated personal injury cases arising out of a collision between an automobile and a diesel switching engine of defendant railroad. The court directed the jury to return a verdict of no cause of action in the husband’s case. The wife’s case was submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict of no cause of action. Harry Watson appeals on the ground that the court erred in directing a verdict because, as he contends, the controlling issue was one of fact for the jury. Maggie Watson appeals on the ground that the court erred in its instructions to the jury. Both parties claim error on the part of the court in the manner and scope of its examination and cross-examination of appellants’ witnesses, and its declarations before the jury discounting their testimony and stating that they had, by their own testimony, discredited themselves.

The facts are as follows: Shortly after midnight on April 21, 1955, Harry and Maggie Watson were proceeding in a Buick coupe automobile on Atherton Road, a two-lane highway in the City of Flint, Michigan. Harry Watson was driving. They were approaching the crossing of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company, where three railroad tracks crossed the highway. The tracks run north and south. The Y^atsons were driving in an easterly direction at a speed of between 20 to 25 miles per hour. The maximum legal rate of speed at this point was 30 miles per hour. The first track they were approaching was 18 feet from the second track; the second track was 25 feet from the third track.

As the Watsons approached the first track, there was a signal light and bell on their right 12 feet in advance of the first track. When they were about 26 feet from the signal light and bell, the light began to flash. There were numerous obstructions to Watson’s view down the tracks, to the right.

A second or two after the light began to flash, the switch engine entered the crossing intersection from the right, on the far or easternmost track. Harry Watson, in an attempt to avoid collision, swerved his car to the left, but the right front of the car struck the projecting “stirrup” of the engine, resulting in the personal injuries suffered by appellants.

[664]*664The district court directed a verdict of no cause of action against Harry Watson on the ground of his contributory negligence. The court, in its consideration of the question, declared to the jury that Watson did not know within what distance he could stop his car at the speed he was traveling. The court further stated that since the average driver should be able to stop the average car, going at 20 to 25 miles per hour, within 54 feet after perceiving the need to stop, Watson was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law because his car traveled at least 73 feet after the signal light started to flash. After directing a verdict against Harry Watson of no cause of action, the court, as Maggie Watson contends, submitted her case to the jury, limiting the liability of the railroad for negligence to its avoidance of the collision, under the doctrine of discovered negligence and “last clear chance”. The jury returned a verdict of no cause of action in the case of Maggie Watson.

It is our view, after careful consideration of the record, that the judgments must be reversed as to both Harry Watson and Maggie Watson.

Appellants’ case was based on the following claimed negligence of the railroad: that it maintained and operated, at the grade crossing in question, “highway crossing protection in the form of an electric combination bell and alternate flashing red lights,” which were “installed and synchronized to go into operation upon actuation by an approaching train”; and that the mechanism at the time of the collision was so synchronized that the lights and bells were actuated and went into operation for an unreasonably short period of time before the engine reached the crossing, thereby misinforming — or not informing — highway traffic as to what action to expect on the part of trains in the immediate vicinity; and, as a result thereof, appellants’ automobile proceeded onto the crossing and collided with the switch engine, causing the injuries complained of.

To support their claim, appellants introduced evidence showing that they were driving at the rate of between 20’ and 25 miles per hour as they approached: the crossing; that the signal flasher at their right was 12 feet in front of the-first track; that it started flashing when they were 26 feet away from it; that the-automobile could not be stopped, at a. speed of 25 miles per hour, in less than 54 feet, and that it would have required am additional “perception time factor,” or reaction time, in which to stop, and that, an average driver in an average car, under average conditions, would require at least 67 feet in which to stop, when going-at the rate of approximately 25 miles per hour. From the point where the Wat-sons first saw the signal light flash to the-point of collision was approximately 73'-feet, as certain witnesses testified. Instead of 73 feet, it was actually 81 feet, according to the testimony of appellants..

The trial court held that Harry Watson: should have been able to stop his car within 54 feet, and that his failure to do-so was contributory negligence resulting-in the collision. The court further said that, counting the “reaction time and everything else,” he should have been' able to stop within 671/2 feet, which would have brought him, as the court assumed, to a stop 4 feet from the track on which the switch engine was traveling, and thus have avoided the collision. This is extremely close figuring in determining, as a matter of law, that Watson-was guilty of contributory negligence. It is, however, unnecessary to resolve-this point. For it is our view that the-case does not turn upon Watson’s ability or failure to stop his car within 54 feet, or within 67 feet, or within the distance-necessary to avoid collision, after seeing-the flashing light of the crossing signal: which, from the testimony, would be 81 feet — 26 feet to the flasher; 12 feet from the flasher to the first track; thence 18: feet to the second track; thence 25 feet: to the third track.

Both Harry Watson and Maggie Watson were completely familiar with this; [665]*665■crossing. They passed over it several -times a day. These tracks were used only for switching operations. As heretofore mentioned, there were three tracks which crossed the highway — the first, 12 feet beyond the crossing signal; the second, 18 feet beyond the first track; and the third, 25 feet beyond the second track. The crucial point in this case is whether the flashing signal was actuated •only a second or two before the Watson ■car reached it. If Watson was driving •at a legal rate of 20 to 25 miles per hour, and the light started to flash when he was only 26 feet away from it, then the •question whether Watson should have ■stopped his car within the shortest distance possible, at the rate he was traveling, is not, in itself, decisive.

Watson, knowing that there were "three tracks ahead of him, would have been in deadly peril if he had applied his brakes with full force immediately when he saw the light flash, for he was then, according to appellants’ evidence, 26 feet ■away from the light, or only 38 feet from the first track. If he had been able to stop his car in 40 feet, he would have stopped on the first track.

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287 F.2d 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-ca6-1961.