80 So. 198 | La. | 1918
The defendant appeals from a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $10,875 damages for personal injuries. He was run over by the defendant’s railroad train, while he was on duty as a police officer in the city of New Orleans, and was very seriously injured. He sued for $30,000, and in answer to the appeal asks that the judgment be increased to that sum.
The plaintiff was the only witness to the accident. It happened at a late hour at night. The train, consisting of 12 cars, the forward car being a tank car, was being shoved by a locomotive along the space occupied by the tracks of several railroad companies immediately behind the dock board roadway near the river front. The charge of negligence is that there was no light, or not a bright light, nor a lookout, on the forward end of the train, nor any alarm given
The defense is that the accident happened, not on the street crossing, but at a point about 120 feet above the crossing, in the defendant’s yard, and on its right of way, where the plaintiff had no right to be, and where the train crew had no reason to expect a man to he; that the train was moving at a very slow speed, only 4 or 5 miles an hour, with a light on the front end, that was easily visible, a man carrying a light on the forward car, and another carrying a light on the next car, which lights were also visible in front of the train; that the whistle on the locomotive was sounded just before the forward end of the train came up to St. Louis street, and the men on the forward end of the train were whistling to give warning of the approach of the train. Denying that there was negligence on the part of the train crew, the defendant pleaded that, if there was any such negligence, the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in go-ing along or upon the railroad track without having stopped, looked or listéned, and that his negligence was the direct cause of the accident.
A rule of the railroad company required a white or bright light on the for
The best evidence that the man on the forward car was not in a position to serve as a lookout is that he did not, nor did any one else on the train, know that an accident had happened until the train had gone to its destination and stopped, at Poydras street, seven or eight blocks beyond the place of the accident, when the crew was told that they had run over a man near St. Louis street. And the best evidence that the red light on che front of the tank ear, the lantern on the side of the tank, and the one on the next car back, did not give warning of the approach of the train, is that the plaintiff, possessed of all his faculties, had no warning.
Although the backing of a railroad train through a city and over street crossings at night is not of itself such negligence as should render the railroad company liable for any accident that might result, it is an operation of sufficient danger to the public to require the railroad company to maintain all reasonable safeguards, such as having a bright light on the forward end of the train, and a lookout there, in a position to warn a person in danger. The defendant in this case did not fulfill that duty to the public.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.