McCracken v. Delano
McCracken v. Delano
Opinion of the Court
This is an action in the district court for Douglas county against the receivers of the Wabash Railroad Company to
For the purposes of the appeal some of the pleadings, facts, contentions and proofs may be summarized as follows : Gilbert was a section-foreman in the employ of defendants. August 8, 1913, after a day’s work, he and his section-crew started home on a handcar, going northward down grade toward Imogene, Iowa. A south-bound freight train consisting of a locomotive and 24 cars, on its way from Council Bluffs, Iowa, to Stanbury, Missouri, struck the handcar about a mile south of Imogene, and Gilbert was fatally injured. According to plaintiff’s brief the following elements of negligence were charged: “Failure to give reasonable and proper warning of the approach of the train; failure to exercise reasonable care to discover the deceased in his situation of peril; and failure to use reasonable diligence and effort in slowing down or stopping the train after the presence of the handcar on the track was, or should have been, discovered.” The collision occurred at the north end of a bridge about a mile south of Imogene. Immediately north of the bridge there is a sharp curve with the convex on the west, where the track runs through á cut having a high bank on the east. ■ At the north end of the bridge the section-crew attempted to remove the handcar from the track. While one wheel was between the rails they all jumped except the foreman. The handcar was struck while Gilbert was still trying to remove it. There is testimony tending to show that a man on the bridge could have seen the approaching train 500 feet away, and that the fireman could have seen a man on the bridge at the same distance. The train was running up grade 18 miles, an hour, and was 1 hour and 30 minutes late. The trainmen testified that the whistle was blown at Imogene, and that the automatic bell was kept ringing until the steam was shut off in the attempt to stop the train. A witness for plaintiff said that he was standing 125 feet east of the bridge, where he saw the collision, that
One of the questions submitted to the jury was the alleged negligence on the part of the trainmen in failing to give warning as they approached the bridge through the cut. On this subject the trial court instructed:
“If you find that in approaching the said town of Imogene and in passing through the same the defendants’ employees in charge of said locomotive did in fact sound such signals or alarms, but further find that the location of the bridge over which the deceased passed just prior to the accident and the curve around which the said train proceeded before reaching the said bridge were such as to require that, in the exercise of reasonable care, the employees of. the defendants in charge of the said locomotive should have given signals other than or different from or in addition to the ones in fact given, or that signals should have been given at a point closer than the town of Imogene, and' further find that the defendants’ employees in charge of the said locomotive failed to give such signals as were required in the exercise of reasonable care upon their approach to said curve, or bridge, such failure to so give such signals would constitute negligence for which the defendants are liable.”
This instruction is challenged as erroneous. Defendants argue that it was the duty of the foreman of - the section-crew to keep a lookout and to send a man ahead to see
Where a railroad company’s rules, of which a section-foreman has notice, require him on approaching a sharp curve through a deep cut on a handcar to send a man ahead to look for a train, the mere failure of trainmen to give warning of their approach, before the presence of section-men on the track is discoverable, is not negligence, in the absence of a statute or a rule requiring them to do so, since*782 the trainmen may assume, until the contrary appears, that section-men will obey reasonable, known rules promulgated for the safety of themselves and others.
The instruction is at variance with the law, and in the form in which the issues were submitted to the jury under the evidence it is clear that the error was prejudicial to defendants.
It is contended by plaintiff that the train crew were guilty of negligence in failing to give warning of their approach, because there was a roadway under the bridge. There was no proof of a statute or a rule requiring them to do so. The common law imposed no such duty. Houston & T. C. R. Co. v. Sgalinski, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 107. The judgment, therefore, cannot be sustained on this ground.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lyde S. McCracken, Administrator v. Frederick A. Delano, Receivers
- Status
- Published