Fayet v. St. Louis S. F. R. Co.
Fayet v. St. Louis S. F. R. Co.
Opinion of the Court
The suit was for damages alleged to have resulted from a collision between an automobile driven by the plaintiff and one of defendant’s trains. It occurred at *4 a public railroad crossing within the corporate limits of the city.
The complaint contained counts for simple negligence and for wanton conduct in the improper operation of the train. To these counts pleas of contributory negligence were interposed and demurrer sustained thereto, in so far as they purported to answer the wanton count. No demurrer was directed to said pleas as answer .to the simple negligence count. A trial on the merits resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendant.,
“It was shown without dispute that this driver did not stop, or attempt to stop, his machine before permitting it to proceed to a point where the approach of the train could be observed and the danger from collision therewith averted. If the approach of the train could not have been seen or heard, because of obstructions in that direction, before the car reached the right of way, then the driver’s duty was to not permit the car to proceed to a point where the approach of the train could not be observed or noted in time to avoid the danger. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Williams, 172 Ala. 560, 55 South. 218; Foshee’s Case, supra; C. of Ga. v. Barnett, 151 Ala. 410, 44 South. 392.”
Of the speed of the train when approaching the crossing, there was no material dispute of the fact that it approached the crossing at a very low rate of speed — from 4 to 8 miles an hour. Defendant’s witnesses variously estimated the speed to have been between 4 and 6 miles, and plaintiff testified that it was 6 or 8 miles an hour. The other occupants of the car at the time of the collision made no estimate of said speed and testified to no fact thereof contrary to the foregoing. It is true that one McCarty, a former engineer, testified that, from the- distance required to stop train, it must- have been, running 25 miles per hour; yet that witness admitted that he had never run a “mallet compound” engine (called a “double ender”); that he had run a “consolidated” on the L. & N., and with a freight train of 21 cars, at a crossing practically level, going at the rate of 5 or 6 miles an hour, all air brakes on the cars in perfect order, he could stop such train at such place instantly. This witness, though testifying, “All I have got to do is to apply the brake and stop just like that (indicating), * * * stop that 'quick (snapping his fingers),” admitted that the ability to stop so quickly as indicated was dependent upon whether the cars propelled were loaded or “empties,” whether the track was wet or dry, and that a difference of two miles an hour in the speed of the train would make little difference as to the distance in which the stop could be made.
[3]When the whole evidence is considered, it is not disclosed whether the track, at the time and place, was wet or dry; whether the 21 cars being propelled were loaded or empty; and whether the engine propelling the train was a “mallet compound,” “consolidated,” or other and different make. In the absence of evidence of such material conditions indicated by Mr. McCarty, as entering into the distance in which a stop may be made when the train is proceeding at a given rate of speed per hour, it may be that witness’ judgment of the distance in which defendant’s train, propelled at 6 or 8 miles an hour, could have been stoxiped, or the rate of speed such train was proceeding that required the given distance within which to stop, was not in material conflict with the positive evidence of the only eyewitness on the question of speed at which, defendant’s train was actually proceeding before and when the collision occurred. The common or judicial knowledge oí courts and juries as to such question is a reference to the ordinary observations of the law of nature or physics as to power and weight affecting momentum. In connection with the evidence, not doubt this universal fact was looked to by the jury in consideration of the question 'of the speed of defendant’s train and the ability to stop such a moving train within the given space to or from the point of collision. Plaintiff further testified, in part, as to the locus in quo, as follows:
“I am acquainted with the extent to which that crossing was used about the 2d day of last September. I couldn’t say about how many peo *5 pie used that crossing every 24 hours, because it is thickly populated, and I am never down there close to the road; but, generally, the way they pass by the house, there are a good many machines. * * * A good many people use it going to and from work, going to their work at Pratt City and Thomas. This accident occurred about 7 or 7:30, and the usage of it is slacker at that time” — that is, at the time of the collision.
There was other evidence tending to show that this crossing was used by a number of people — between 300 and 500 persons — crossing over in 24 hours; but with what frequency the crossing was used (as to time of the day) is not otherwise shown than by the plaintiff himself, who testified on direct examination that at the time of the accident “the usage of” the crossing “is slacker.” The testimony did not show that the crossing was ever crowded, or th,at any confusion of trafile existed there at any time of the day or night. As a matter of fact, the evidence showed that the highway was not strictly a street, but merely a suburban macadamized road.
Among other things, plaintiff testified of the location of the tracks and obstructions standing on the same as follows:
“That first track and the main track where I was struck are about six feet apart. The train was backing, going towards Pratt City. You can see the other track along here (indicating).
“Q. Was that car yonder to your right as you were going across and that bunch of cars to the left? A. That bunch of ears was to the left, the big bunch as I was going across; and this single car that it knocked me up against was on the right on the third track, and the train was going that way, coming towards Birmingham from the direction of Amory, Miss. The train that struck me was coming from the direction of the whole string of cars. * * * I didn’t see * * * lights on the back of the car; it was dark. I was going south; the engine was going west, and there was a whole string of cars right in there (indicating). That track was full, and these cars up here cut off my view of the main track. I couldn’t see the main track at all until we got up where the road was; you could see on the right-hand side, but you couldn’t see on the left. I did not hear any bell. I could not say whether there was any ringing or not. * * * There was nobody at the end of that car; I have sworn to it, and I will swear to it again. I saw somebody after the accident occurred about 40 or 50 feet ahead of me and between my machine and the switch that was there then and that is moved now. The train .was in front of me, and the party was in front of me. The train had already knocked me around and had me headed towards Birmingham in my car. There wasn’t anybody on the crossing at all until after I was struck, and I saw a man on the track up there 40 or 50 feet. I couldn’t tell who he was, but he had a lantern swinging on his arm.”
Though plaintiff denied that the flagman With the lantern was on the back end of the car as it proceeded, he admitted hearing a man “holler” and saw some one with a lantern at the crossing or 40 or 50 feet therefrom after the impact. This was strongly corroborative of the flagman’s testimony that he was on the front of the approaching car with the lighted lantern, and that he “hollered” and jumped from the car just as he saw the collision was immediately imminent.
Plaintiff’s wife testified that the crossing was more, of ten used at the hour of the collision than at any other time; and his son testified that it was extensively used about that time of the day.
If the photographs introduced in evidence, with reference to which witnesses testified, had been reproduced in the record, they might, and doubtless would, shed light on whether the crossing was within a populous city or town, or was merely an improved suburban roadway leading from the two municipalities. Witnesses testified with reference to these photographs (of the location of the tracks, the obstructing cars standing thereon at the time, and the view of the tracks from the direction in which the automobile approached); and such references in the testimony to the photographs of the locus in quo come dangerously near creating contradictions in the bill of exceptions reciting that it contained all the evidence. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Jenkins, 196 Ala. 136, 140 (3), 72 South. 68.
Charge 9 was properly given. Cent. of Ga. v. Foshee, supra, 125 Ala. 199, 27 South. 1006; Bason v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., supra; Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Barnett, 151 Ala. 407, 44 South. 392.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
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