137 S.W.2d 747 | Ark. | 1940
Appellee recovered a judgment against appellants in the sum of $700 to compensate him for damages he sustained, when his truck was struck by a train *2 at the Smithdale crossing, about two miles east of Parkin, and destroyed, and in which he was struck and injured by the truck, in an effort to get out of the way. The negligence charged and relied on was in failing to exercise ordinary care to keep the crossing in reasonable repair, failing to give the statutory signals for the crossing, and failing to keep a proper or efficient lookout by the operatives of the train to discover persons or property on the track.
It is insisted by appellants for a reversal of the judgment and dismissal of the action, that the undisputed evidence and the physical facts disclose that at a distance of 63 feet north of the crossing, looking west, appellee could have seen down the track to Parkin some two miles away, and could have seen the train anywhere on the track between the crossing and Parkin. It is said that his failure to thus see the train was negligence and that such negligence on his part equaled or exceeded any negligence of appellants, and that a directed verdict should have been given in their favor.
We cannot agree with appellants in this contention. They place great reliance on our recent cases of Mo. Pac. Rd. Co. v. Davis,
Also, the evidence is in sharp dispute as to the giving of the crossing signals, and as to the failure to keep an efficient lookout by the engineer. There is a sharp curve in the tracks to the north, west of the crossing, which prevented the fireman from seeing the crossing until within about 500 feet of it. The engineer said he was keeping a lookout, but that his view of the crossing was obstructed by the telephone poles and cross-arms coming into his view because of the curve, and that he could not see the truck on the track until he was too close to stop the train. There was substantial evidence that no attempt was made to stop the train, no application of the brakes, until about the time of the collision, and no signals given until about the same time, and other evidence on the part of appellee tended to show that the engineer could have seen the truck on the crossing at a distance of approximately 1,700 or 1,800 feet away, and could have stopped the train much within that distance.
Our statute on lookout, 11144, Pope's Digest, imposes liability on railroads not only in cases of discovered peril; but in those instances also where, by the exercise of *4
reasonable care, the peril might have been discovered, and this, too, regardless of the contributory negligence of the injured person. Railway Co. v. Horn,
We, therefore, conclude that the trial court did not err in refusing to direct a verdict for appellants.
Affirmed.