Seelhorst v. Pontchartrain R. R. Co.

Decision Date01 July 1929
Docket Number11,560
CourtCourt of Appeal of Louisiana — District of US
PartiesSEELHORST ET AL. v. PONTCHARTRAIN R. R. CO

Rehearing Refused October 21, 1929.

Writ of Certiorari and Review Refused by Supreme Court December 2 1929.

Appeal from Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans, Division "A." Hon. Hugh C. Cage, Judge.

Action by W. G. E. Seelhorst, Jr., and his brothers and sisters against Pontchartrain Railroad Company.

There was judgment for defendant and plaintiffs appealed.

Judgment reversed.

H. W Robinson, of New Orleans, attorney for plaintiffs, appellants.

Denegre, Leovy & Chaffe, and N. P. Phillips, of New Orleans, attorneys for defendant, appellee.

HIGGINS J. JANVIER, J., dissenting.

OPINION

HIGGINS, J.

Mrs. E. L. Seelhorst, a woman 68 years of age, was killed about mid-day of July 1, 1926, at the intersection of Elysian Fields Avenue and Derbigny Street, in this city, by a train operated by the defendant railroad company. Plaintiffs, the sons and daughters of the deceased, bring this action in damages claiming $ 30,000.

The charges of negligence in the petition are that the bell on the engine was not rung; that the crossing signal at Derbigny Street was out of order and the bell attached to it not ringing; that the train was being operated with the engine reversed; that the fireman was coaling his engine at the time the accident happened and no lookout was maintained on the side of the engine nearest Mrs. Seelhorst.

Defendant denied all charges of negligence and averred that the train was being carefully operated; that due warning was given of its approach "to the public in general and to Mrs. E. L. Seelhorst in particular not only by the wigwag bell at the crossing, but by the bell on the locomotive, both of which were in order and ringing loudly and audibly; and apart from these signals, Mrs. Seelhorst could not have avoided seeing and hearing the train (there being nothing to prevent her doing so) had she used her ordinary senses."

The case was tried by a jury and a verdict and judgment rendered dismissing plaintiffs' demand. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The street crossing where the accident occurred is in a very populous section of the city. Elysian Fields Avenue is very wide, being 150 feet 6 inches from curb to curb. Of this 150 feet 6 inches, 52 feet thereof is occupied by railroad tracks and an additional 48 feet by the railroad right of way. There are two board walks for the use of pedestrians. There are two warning signals, one at each side of the crossing. These signals consist of a light, a bell and a moving arm called a wigwag.

The train of defendant railroad company was being operated on one of the five tracks, with the coal tender in front of the engine, at a speed of fifteen or twenty miles per hour according to some witnesses, and, according to the engineer, six or eight miles per hour. It was proceeding in the direction of the lake from the river on the track nearest Canal Street, which was the fifth track and the one farthest away from Mrs. Seelhorst. Mrs. Seelhorst was crossing on the lake side of Derbigny Street from the lower side of Elysian Fields Avenue to the upper, or Canal Street side, on one of the two board walks which traversed the tracks at right angles. She was returning to her residence from a corner grocery on the opposite side of the avenue, where she made a few purchases. She had crossed four of the five tracks and was struck by the train while in the act of crossing the fifth.

The train consisted of a coal tender, which had a cow catcher attached to the front part of it, the engine and two passenger coaches. It was in charge of an engineer and a fireman, who were in the cab of the engine and a conductor and flagman, who were in the coaches. The train had stopped at Claiborne Street, one square from the scene of the accident, for the purpose of receiving and discharging passengers.

The engine was backing with the engineer seated on the left hand side of the cab in a position where he could not see to his right or the direction from which Mrs. Seelhorst approached the tracks. The fireman, who usually occupied the seat on the right hand side of the engine, or the side nearest Mrs. Seelhorst, was engaged in shoveling coal in the firebox of the engine. Neither the engineer nor the fireman saw her at any time before the accident.

The engineer testified that immediately upon striking her, he applied the emergency brake and succeeded in stopping the train after it had proceeded about 150 feet. Mrs. Seelhorst's body was thrown from the track to the left hand or Canal Street side of the fifth track on to the right of way of the company, she evidently having almost succeeded in crossing the last track.

There is considerable conflict in the testimony as to whether the bell on the engine, or the warning signal at the crossing known as the wigwag signal, was ringing, but we are convinced that the testimony preponderates in favor of plaintiffs, and we find, therefore that the bell on the engine was not ringing and that the signal at the crossing was not in operation. There was no lookout on the tender, which was in front of the engine, or elsewhere, in a position to see Mrs. Seelhorst and she was not seen by any member of the train crew. As a matter of fact, there is no serious contention concerning defendant's negligence. The alleged contributory negligence of the deceased is relied upon as preventing recovery.

The burden of proving contributory negligence rests upon defendant. Nash vs. La. Railway & Nav. Co., 153 La. 410, 96 So. 14; Blanchard vs. Gulf, Colo. & Santa Fe R. R. Co., 1 La.App. 169.

The argument is that the negligence of a railroad company is of no consequence, for the reason that deceased, being in full possession of her faculties, should have made certain that the way was clear before crossing the tracks; that she either saw or should have seen the train, and in either event her negligence was the proximate cause of the accident. In other words, she walked into the train and must, therefore, suffer the consequences of her carelessness and reckless conduct. This argument if pursued to its logical conclusion, would make it practically impossible to fasten liability upon a railroad company for street crossing accidents, no matter what precautions essential for the safety of the public it may have failed to observe. It is unsound. As was said in Lampkin vs. McCormick, 105 La. 418, 29 So. 952, and quoted with approval in Draiss vs. Payne, 158 La. 652, 104 So. 487.

"Railroad corporations backing their trains through danger points in the streets of a city must use proper care and take proper precautions to safeguard citizens upon them. If they entirely fail to do this, they assume the risk of injury to individuals, even if the injury received be done (due) to some extent to the latter's imprudence or forgetfulness. They cannot fail entirely in their duty, and argue that, had the duty been performed, it would have been in the particular case, unavailing. The results should have been put to the test by actual trial made at the time."

There was no flagman at this crossing, a circumstance which enhanced the danger and increased the necessity for care on the part of the employees in charge of the defendant's train. Lampkin vs. McCormick (supra). There should have been a fireman in the window opposite the engineer. "There must be an engineer at the engine, who has charge of the window on the right, a fireman on the left, a lookout at the end of the train on occasions such as this was, and there should be a flagman at the crossing when required. If there is no flagman, then there is necessity for greater precaution on the part of the other servants of the company. The absence of the flagman greatly enhanced the danger." (Ibid.)

In Draiss vs. Payne, supra, the court said:

"Those in charge of the train, under such circumstances (the circumstances which obtained in that case) are the first aware of its approach and of the proximity of the danger, unknown to persons and vehicles at or near the crossing in a city. They are therefore in a better position than anyone else to avoid accidents by the use of ordinary care."

The engineer testified that the presence of the tender in front of the engine obscured his view of objects to the right of the tracks nearer to him than 150 feet, but beyond that distance he could see very clearly. The train stopped at the corner of Claiborne and Elysian Fields Avenue, which is one city block or approximately 300 feet from the scene of the accident. If the engineer had been looking, he must have seen the deceased on the crossing, for, according to his own statement, he could have seen her until she was within 150 feet of the engine. It would have been a very easy matter for him to have given a short shrill whistle, or to have rung the bell, or to have slackened the speed of his train in order to prevent the accident. Of course, if the fireman had been on lookout on the other side of the cab he could have seen deceased continuously and without interruption up to the time she was struck and could have caused some warning to be given. As was said in the case of Betz & Son vs. Illinois Central R. Co., 161 La. 929, 931, 109 So. 766, a case involving damage to an automobile at a crossing where there were four tracks covering a space of 35 feet (in this case there were five tracks covering about 52 feet):

"The trial judge found, and the evidence supports the finding that the engineer could have seen the hearse approaching the crossing, and about to cross the track, at a distance of about 250 feet, and had ample time and opportunity of blowing his whistle and to have stopped his engine and avoided the...

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