119 Ark. 36 | Ark. | 1915
Appellant prosecutes this appeal to reverse a judgment against it in flavor of appellee for damages for the .alleged negligent killing of her hnsb'and by one of its passenger trains. The facts proved by appel-lee are substantially as follows:
Appellee, Mrs. Lillian Wilson, is the widow of W. S. Wilson, who was killed near Texarkana, in Miller County, Arkansas, on February 28, 1914, by one of appellant’s passenger trains. Wilson was 'an old locomotive engineer and had been in the employ of appellant as such until about two years before he was 'killed. • His sense of hearing was almost entirely gone, and for two years he had been engaged in trying to instore it. At the time he was killed he was in the hospital of appellant at Texarkana, Arkansas, for the purpose of treatment, and had walked out on the railroad some distance from Kirby’s Crossing, which was about two miles from Texarkana. On his return to the city, he was struck and almost instantly killed by one of defendant’s passenger trains near Kirby’s Crossing. There was a curve about ia half mile north of Kirby’s Crossing, and the train which struck deceased whistled as it came around the curve. The track was straight -from the curve to the crossing.
The train consisted of an engine and eight passenger coaches. When it reached the whistling post, about a third of a anile from the crossing, the engineer .again blew the whistle and some of the witnesses to the accident say that the engineer blew three sharp blasts when he was in about twenty feet of Wilson; that the train which struck Wilson projected him forward sixty or seventy-five feet; (that they could- not see that the train had checked its speed 'any a't the time it struck Wilson; .and that Wilson seemed to be entirely oblivious of the approach of the brain and was walking along 'the middle of the track with his head bent down.
There were six or seven little negro ¡boy¡s land girls between Wilson and the approaching train, traveling in the same direction. When the engineer (blew the whistle at the whistling post -these little negro children who were about one hundred yards ahead of the engine, immediately got off the track. The witnesses state that Wilson proceeded leisurely along and did not appear to notice the approach of the train until just immediately before it struck him; that he then attempted to jump off the track but the pilot beam of the engine struck him and knocked him sixty or seventy-five feet ahead of the train and that the train stopped in a distance of a little more than six hundred feet from the point where it struck Wilson.
One of the witnesses for appellee states- that a short time before the trial he saw a train consisting of an -engine and nine passenger coaches stop at -albout the place where Wils’on was killed in order to avoid striking some cattle, that the train was going -at a speed oif -about thirty-five to forty miles an hour, and that when the emergency brake was applied the train stopped within -a distance of its -own length. The train which struck Wilson was likewise running at a speed of thirty-five to forty miles -an hour.
The -engineer o-f the train which struck Wilson testified that the accident happened at ia little past 10 o ’clock in the morning and that -as the train came around the curve he was running -at a rate of forty miles an hour; that he Mew the Whistle as the train came around the curve and again blew it at the whistling p-o-st which was, as he stated, 'about -a quarter of a anile from -the crossing; that he saw the little negro children and Wilson walking -along the track ahead of the train; that the little negro children were between Wilson -and the train -and that they got -off the track when he blew the Whistle at the whistling post; that he -did not see anything in the appearance of Wils-on to indicate that he was oblivious -of the approaching train, -and that he supposed he would get -off the track before 'tibe train reached him; that he had been an engineer on the road for .a great many years, and that his experience before this time ¡Led him to believe that Wilson would get off the track; that when the train ¡approached in four or five hundred feet of Wilson he blew three or four .short blasts to warn Wilson of the approach of the train; that Wilson failed to get off the track and he then applied the emergency brake; that Ithe train then ran ¡about ¡a thousand feet before it stopped; that it struck Wilson and carried him forward about seventy-five feet; that the condition of the engine was first class, the 'emergency brake working well, and that he did all he could to stop the train; that he expected the man to get off the track when he sounded the alarm whistle, and when he failed to do s'o he applied the emergency brake; and that the last he saw of Wilson he was about seventy feet ahead of the engine.
The fireman ¡and the roadmaster, who was also on the engine, corroborated the statements of the engineer, 'and in addition the fireman testified 'that the whistle wais kept blowing almost all of the time after they passed the whistling post, 'and that the (bell was kept ringing .after that time. He said that the blasts vTere short and quick.
Another of the witnesses for appellee testified that the engine did not appear to have been checked at all at the time it struck Wilson and that the alarm whistle was not blown until 'the engine was in about twenty feet of Wilson. This tended to contradict the testimony of the engineer to the effect that he blew the alarm whistle when the train was four or five hundred feet away from Wilson, and then immediately applied the brake in emergency.
It will he remembered that the firemian testified that the engineer blew the whistle for the crossing at the whistling post which was at least a quarter of a mile from the crossing; that the bell was ringing from that time and that the whistle was blown almost continuously until Wilson was struck. This tends strongly to indicate that the engineer was apprised of the fact that Wilson was unconscious of the approaching train. If he saiw the little ne-groes run off the track as soon as he blew the whistle at the whistling post, .and if, as stated by the fireman, he almost continuously blew the whistle from that time on, the jury might have found that he necessarily ¡saw that Wilson was not conscious of 'the approaching train 'and should have ¡applied the ¡brakes sooner than he did.
We think there was testimony of a substantia! character to support the verdict. See St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Scott, 102 Ark. 417; Memphis, D. & G. Ry. Co. v. Buckley, 99 Ark. 422; St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Wilkerson, 46 Ark. 513.
The deceased was ¡an old ¡engineer .and had worked on appellant’s road for many years. The engineer ¡and other members ¡of the crew of the train which ¡struck him knew that he was .almost wholly deaf, and the remark of the engineer meant .no more than to say that if he. had known the man walking on the track was Scotty Wilson he would have stopped the train because he knew that Scotty Wilson was iso deaf that he couldn’t hear its approach. It ¡simply meant that if he had known that ¡a deaf man or ¡a man oblivious of the ¡approach of the train was walking on the track in front of it he would have stopped the train. The remark worked no prejudice whatever .to the rights of appellant.
It follows that the judgment will be affirmed.