74 So. 990 | La. | 1917
The plaintiff appeals from a judgment rejecting her demand for damages for the death of R. L. Woods, husband of the plaintiff and father of her minor child. The suit is for the use and benefit of the child as well as on behalf of the widow individually.
R. L. Woods was run over and killed by a locomotive tender operated by the defendant Longville Lumber Company, on the railroad track of the defendant Louisiana & Pacific Railway Company. The defendants were engaged in certain logging operations, and it appears that Woods was employed by both companies as a car repairer at the time of the accident.
While Woods was engaged at his work at a repair switch near the main line of railroad, he was instructed by his superior, the trainmaster, to go and show the crew of an approaching train, called No. 99, where to place a barrel of oil on the switch. Picking up a hammer and two wrenches, Woods ran to the main line and hailed the train, which was backing up at a rate of about 3 or 4 miles an hour. He then walked along the side of the track, in the direction in which the train was traveling, until it passed him, when he went upon the track and followed the train. At that time another locomotive, known as No. 98, was following on the main line, traveling backward and shoving its tender ahead at a rate of about 4 miles an hour and at a distance of 100 yards or perhaps 200 yards behind engine No. 99. The engineer on No. 98 had shut off steam, and the engine was making very little noise. The bell was not ringing, and there was no lookout on the tender of No. 98. The view of the engineer and fireman from their positions in the cab was obstructed by the tender, so that they could not see an object on the track within a distance of 180 or 200 feet in front of the tender, in the direction in which they were traveling.
The day was clear, the track was straight, and there was nothing to obstruct the view of the approaching train from the position of Woods.
A man named Gainey, a brother of the fireman on engine No. 99, but not an employé of either of the defendants, was riding in the cab of that engine, and, looking back,
Woods was found under the tender and near the rear end of it; that is, near the end that had not passed over him. One of the brake beams of the tender was resting on his neck, and his neck was broken. The brake beam under the end of the tender that had passed over him was also so near the ground as to have injured him seriously if not fatally; hence it was impossible to know precisely how and when he received the fatal injury. His heart stopped beating ten minutes after he was removed from under the tender.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff admit that Woods was guilty of negligence in going upon the railroad track without observing that engine No. 98 was approaching; and they admit that his negligence, in walking along the track with his back towards the approaching train and without looking back at any time to avoid the danger continued until Woods was struck and knocked down. Their contention is that, with ordinary care and promptness, the engineer on the locomotive No. 98 could have avoided the killing after the tender had struck Woods and the engineer was informed of the perilous situation. The plaintiff’s ease therefore depends entirely upon the humane doctrine of the last clear chance.
One witness testified that immediately after the accident the fireman of engine No. 98 admitted that he saw Woods go upon the track and thought the latter had gone across to the other side of the track. The fireman denied having made that statement, and several other witnesses who were present at the time the statement is supposed to have been made testified that they did not hear it. In our opinion, whether the fireman on No. 98 did or did not see Woods go upon the track is of no importance, especially if, seeing Woods go upon the track, the fireman thought he had gone entirely across the track.
The doctrine of the last clear chance has no application to a ease in which the negligence of the injured party continued until the moment of the accident and was the proximate cause of it. The negligence of Woods, in remaining on the railroad track without observing the approaching train, continued until the tender of the locomotive struck him. During the few seconds when he was being rolled over by the footboard and mangled under the brake beams of the tender of the locomotive the defendants’ employés had no chance whatever to save him.
Whether it was negligence on the part of the employés of the defendant company to run the engine backward, tender foremost, without some one on the tender to act as a lookout, and without ringing the bell, is of no importance in this case, because the negligence of Woods in walking on the track without observing the approaching engine was the proximate cause of his injury and death.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.