Southern Ry. Co. v. Sutton
Southern Ry. Co. v. Sutton
Opinion of the Court
(after stating the facts as above). The statute upon which the plaintiff relies requires that a lookout shall be .kept upon the locomotive, and that when any “obstruction appears
,The defendant contends that the statute is penal and must be strictly construed; that under such strict construction of the statute it should be held that the plaintiff was not within striking distance-, unless he was in position to be struck by the front of the engine; that if he was in such a location that, had he remained fixed and immovable, he would not have been struck, he could not have been-within “striking distance.” This court has recognized the penal
The Supreme Court of Tennessee has more than once declared that the statute should be rigidly enforced. Railroad Co. v. Scales, 2 Lea, 688; Railway Co. v. Howard, 90 Tenn. 144, 148, 19 S. W. 116.
The question presented on this review is not, as suggested by plaintiff in error, whether the railroad company shall be held liable for not putting on the brakes and stopping the train in a case where the person passed by the train, after being once out of striking distance, shall fall or be thrown against the side of the train. The real and decisive question is whether, after a situation has arisen requiring the railroad company to observe the statutory precautions, and after it has entered upon their observance, it may properly suspend or ignore them so long as the person entitled to the protection of the statute is “still so close to the track that, having due regard for the instinct of self-preservation and the involuntary movements of the body, there is still a reasonable probability or likelihood that he may fall or be thrown against the .side of the engine or train as it passes him.” The question is merely one of definition; that is to say, when one shall be held to be “beyond striking distance.” We find nothing in the decisions of the Supreme Court of Tennessee directly decisive of this question. It must be answered in the light of reason, having in mind the object of the statute, the mischief it aims at, and the construction generally put upon the statute by the Supreme Court of Tennessee. As said by that court in N. & C. Railroad Co. v. Carroll, Adm’r, 6 Heisk. at page 368:
“The question of what is, or what is not, an obstruction on a railroad track, ■is not a question on the terms used in art, nor within any of the rules laid down on this subject. It is a simple question of fact, and can only mean that which may obstruct or hinder the free and safe passage of the train, or that which may receive an injury or damage, such as would be unlawful to inflict, ■if run over or against by the train, as in the case of stock, or a man approaching on the track.”
The decision of this court in Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Truett, 111 Fed. 876, 50 C. C. A. 42, is pertinent. In that case a horse on which plaintiff’s decedent was riding, when about to cross the track, became frightened by the train and unmanageable. It was plaintiff’s ■contention that while the horse was whirling about in his fright the •decedent was thrown against one of the cars in the train. The question was, therefore, whether, although decedent “and his horse had .appeared upon the track, he had yet gotten far enough away from the
“Accepting as correct the construction of the statute to be that where one who has appeared upon the track, and then gets away from it under circumstances which indicate that he is able to keep out of the way, but afterwardsgets back into collision with the train, there can be no recovery, we do not think that that consequence would follow if the man appears upon the track in such circumstances as that it is seen that he may be carried by a force beyond his control out of and into the danger line, only momentarily disappearing from the track. * * * We are unable to accept the proposition which seems to be contended for in the brief for plaintiff in error that if, at the-time when the engine passed, Truett was out of striking distance, that would relieve the company from the obligations imposed by the statute, but think that, as before indicated, the circumstances might be such as to justly induce-the expectation that before the train could pass it might come into collision with the party who had been seen upon the track but seen to be unable to-control his own movements.”
In our opinion, taking into account the attracting and disturbing-force of a swiftly passing train, a person “still so close to the track that, having due regard for the instinct of self-preservation and the-involuntary movements of the body, there is still a reasonable probability or likelihood that he may fall or be thrown against the side of the engine or train as it passes him,” is as clearly within striking distance of the train as was the decedent in the Truett Case. We find' nothing in the Tennessee decisions out of harmony with this construction.
We think the trial judge rightly interpreted the statute in the definition given by him of striking distance.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is, accordingly, affirmed.
Reference
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- SOUTHERN RY. CO. v. SUTTON
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- 1. Railroads (§ 401*) — Injuries to Persons on or Near Tracks — Tennessee Statute — Persons “Beyond Striking Distance.” Shauuou’s Code Teuu. §§ 1574-1576, relatiug to railroads, provides for the keeping of a lookout ou all locomotives, and that when any “obstruction appears upon the road the alarm whistle shall be sounded, the brakes put down and every possible means employed to stop the train and prevent an accident,” and, as construed by the Supreme Court of the state, imposes an absolute liability on the railroad company in case of failure to comply with its requirements whether or not the damage or injury results from such failure and without regard to the question of contributory uegligence, which can he considered only as affecting the amount of damages recoverable. Also, as construed by such court, the statute applies in every case where a person appears upon the track, or so near thereto as to be within “striking distance” of the train. Plaintiff was walking on or beside the track of defendant’s road, when a train approached from behind, and he was struck and injured by some part of the side of the engine. Those on the engine testified that they saw plaintiff on the track and sounded the whistle and applied the brakes, but that plaintiff then stepped off the track to one side, and the speed of the train was resumed. Held, that an instruction, having reference to such testimony, was correct which charged the jury that plaintiff did not pass “beyond striking distance,” so as to absolve defendant from the duty oí stopping the train, so long as he was still so close to the track that, having due regard for the instinct of self-preservation and the involuntary movements of the body, there was still a reasonable probability or likelihood that he might fall or be thrown against the side of the engine ok train as it passed him. [Ed. Note. — For other eases, see Railroads, Dec. Dig. § 401.*] 2. Statutes (§ 241*) — Rules op Construction — Penal Daws. Although penal laws and statutes in derogation of the common law are-to be strictly construed and not extended beyond their plain meaning, yet the intention of the Legislature must govern in the construction of penal as well as other statutes, and they are not to be construed so strictly as to defeat the obvious intention of the Legislature. [Ed.- Note. — For other cases, see Statutes, Cent. Dig. §§ 322, 323; Dee. Dig. § 241.*]