No. 3005 | 6th Cir. | Nov 6, 1917

PER CURIAM.

[ 1 ] While plaintiff’s decedent was walking on the railroad track, he was struck and killed by a train approaching from behind. His administrator recovered, in the court below, judgment for the money value of his life. Upon motion for a new trial, the District Judge thought that all questions of error in the charge regarding the precise rules of liability were made immaterial by the conceded fact that the engineer, if he had been looking ahead, could and would have seen the deceased 150 feet away; that, in that event, the engineer could have blown the whistle, and the decedent could have stepped out of danger; but that the engineer did not look and did not sound the whistle. The District Judge thought that these facts demonstrated a clear liability, under .the Tennessee Precautions Act (subsection 4, § 1574, Shannon’s Cpde). With this conclusion, we agree.

[2] The only excuse alleged is that the fireman had seen the danger and had called to the engineer, and that the latter’s attention was engaged in an unsuccessful effort to find out what the fireman’s call had been, or in putting on the brakes without trying to' sound the whistle. This excuse appears to us so obviously insufficient to justify nonaction', where the statute requires action, that we think it proper to impose a penalty of $200, 5 per cent, of the judgment below, and in addition to interest, under the terms of rule 26, clause 2 (202 Fed. xvii, 118 C. C. A. xvii). Southern Ry. v. Gadd, 233 U.S. 572" date_filed="1914-05-11" court="SCOTUS" case_name="Southern Railway Co. v. Gadd">233 U. S. 572, 581, 34 Sup. Ct. 696, 58 L. Ed. 1099" date_filed="1914-05-11" court="SCOTUS" case_name="Southern Railway Co. v. Gadd">58 L. Ed. 1099.

The judgment is affirmed, with costs, and with this penalty.

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