Wells v. Southern Railroad Co.

1 Tenn. App. 691, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 691 (Wells v. Southern Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Southern Railroad Co., 1 Tenn. App. 691, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 9 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The Circuit Judge directed a verdict in favor of . the defendant, and the plaintiff has appealed and insists that the facts of this case bring it within the rule of the exceptional case and make applicable the doctrine of the “last clear chance,” as announced in the case of Todd v. Railroad, 135 Tenn., 105.

On March 26, 1924, the plaintiff’s intestate, his father, Leonard Wells, was run over and killed by a backing switch-engine of the defendant company, in tbe city of Bristol, and within the yards of the company. The deceased, a portly man seventy-five years of age, with defective hearing, was walking into Bristol on the main tracks of the company, and near the plant of the Stone Lumber Company. At a point one hundred feet north of the railway switch and about two hundred feet south of the Ashe Street crossing, Wells met Allenbury, section-foreman of the company, and Allenbury warned Wells of the danger of an old man walking with a stick, in walking the tracks, and as a result Wells got off the main line over on the side track, where he was later killed. At this time an engine engaged in switching, or the coupling up of á train, was coming out of Bristol on the main line and was at a point just north of the Ashe Street crossing. When the engine blew for the crossing, Wells stepped off of the main line on to the switch or side track and continued his course towards Bristol. The engine ran by Wells, who was facing it, and continued beyond him about one hundred or two-hundred feet, stopped and switched over to the side track upon which he was walking and backed up behind Wells and ran him down and killed him.

The track from the switch to the -Ashe Street crossing was practically straight and Wells was an obstruction that could have been readily seen by a person on the lookout upon the engine, after the engine switched to the side, for Wells was walking on the ends of the ties or outer edge of the track. The engine was running *693 at a speed of from eight to ten miles an hour and there is proof that at the time it struck him it was picking up speed, but its maximum speed is not shown to have been over ten miles an hour. The accident happended about eight o’clock in the morning. There were several eyewitnesses to the accident, who were laborers of the lumber company and witnesses of-the plaintiff. The engine was equipped with an automatic bell-ringer, and the bell was being rung continuously. No one was on the lookout ahead, we must conclude this for the reason the evidence is in conflict and every intendment must be resolved in favor of the plaintiff in testing the right of the trial judge to direct a verdict.

When the engine was switching over on the side track and was bearing down upon the deceased, at the rate of eight to ten miles an hour, and while the deceased and the engine were in plain view of the witnesses and about the length of two rails’ distance therefrom, and while the engine was seventy to seventy-five feet from the deceased, one of witnesses says that he turned his head in order not to see the accident, which he anticipated, but just as he turned he saw the deceased step from the ends of the cross ties, which was a place- of less hazardous position, into the center of the track, without looking backward and towards the approaching engine, and that when he looked back again he saw the stick of the deceased flying into the air and the deceased falling forward. A leg was severed, the deceased suffered a concussion of the brain and died within a few minutes after the witnesses had rushed to him.

The engine blew for the Ashe Street crossing as it went down and as it came back, and its near proximity should have acquainted the deceased with the shifting operations, if his hearing faculty was so defective as to render him unable to hear, but he had been warned of his dangerous situation by the section-foreman and had stepped from the main track to permit an engine and tender to pass him, and knew the engine was engaged in switching operations.

The yards of the company were used as a walkway by the people living in the immediate vicinity in going to and from the city of Bristol, and the company had knowledge of this use and was charged with the duty to look out and guard against injury to persons using the frequented way. There were three tracks in use, but between the tracks was a walkway of comparative safety, the deceased elected not to use the walkway between the tracks from which he might have found a way of escape, but chose to use, first, the more dangerous way by walking on the ends of the ties on the outside of the rails, and later electing to use the most hazardous, at a time when it afforded no means of escape, by stepping into the center of the track without looking back, and when the engine was bearing down upon him, seventy feet away, at the rate of ten miles an hour. Had he, at the time he stepped to the center of the track, used the ordinary *694 instinct of self-preservation he would have seen the approaching engine and would have- had time to make his escape. He stepped over in the center of the track and passed from view of the lookout ahead and assumed a most hazardous position at a time when it was practically impossible to prevent the. accident, had the employees -of the company known of his hazard and used every effort to prevent the accident. Had the lookout ahead seen the deceased walking on the ends of the ties, as is insisted it was his duty to see, and, ill law, is held to have seen, still the lookout would have had the right to assume that the deceased was exercising the prudence of the ordinary man by using his faculties of hearing and seeing, and therefore was aware of the approaching engine and would step off the track to a place of safety, which was then available to him, and this assumption, while not relieving the company to use every precaution to prevent the accident, would acquit the employees of any element of wantonness or maliciousness in their conduct, and especially under these circumstances, is the element of w'antonness or maliciousness absent, since the employees of the company-were not aware of the presence of the deceased, and this element is essential before the plaintiff can ■invoke the doctrine of “the last clear -chance” when the presence of the deceased is unknown to the defendant.

The statutory precautions do not apply to a switching operation, as is admitted, and the suit is grounded upon a common-law court of negligence, and while under the statute contributory negligence goes in mitigation of damages, under the common-iaw contributory negligence defeats the action except in those excepted cases to be herein considered. Railroad v. Hugh, 95 Tenn., 419; Todd v. Railroad, supra.

The rule of the doctrine of “the last clear chance” is that contributory negligence of the plaintiff will not bar a recovery where the defendant could have avoided the accident thereafter, where the acts of negligence were successive acts of the parties, but the negligence of the defendant must be conscious misconduct after knowledge of the plaintiff’s peril, and the defendant’s failure to exercise due care to discover plaintiff’s peril is not chargeable against the defendant so as to invoke the rule of “the last clear chance.” Where the misconduct or negligence of the plaintiff is simultaneous with that of defendant, or the act of defendant has not terminated as a casual factor, there can be no recovery under the doctrine of “the last clear chance.” This is a statement of the general rule, as announced in Todd v.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 691, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-southern-railroad-co-tennctapp-1926.