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Case Results
3.5 MILLION FOR RAILROAD "TRESPASSER"
How do you get sufficient damages for an industrial
worker who leaves his work station, borrows his employer's
front-end loader, parks it across a railroad track at 2:00
A.M., dismounts to load the bucket with railroad ties for
his own personal use, and fails to notice an oncoming train?
The short answer: candidly admit some degree of negligence,
emphasize the long-term economic impact of the devastating
injuries, and conduct aggressive discovery to uncover the
railroad's institutional negligence.
CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE
Candidly admitting contributory negligence can disarm the
defense ("Of course there is contributory negligence, that's
why we are only asking for 10 million, not 20 million"), but
should be attempted only after making sure there is no
alternative. Plaintiff's counsel Dean Brett conducted four
separate mock juries, presenting contributory negligence
arguments and the best alternative replies to each. Only
after these confidential juries found contributory
negligence of 50 percent, 40 percent, 23 percent and 60
percent did counsel decide their efforts would be more
fruitful emphasizing other issues.
THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF DEVASTATING INJURIES
After being hit by the train, Plaintiff incurred over $1.2
million in medical bills while spending a year hospitalized.
He was fitted with a prosthetic leg, a colostomy bag, and a
hearing aid. Despite a heroic period of rehabilitation,
doctors forecast his continuing inability to compete in the
labor force. A physical capacities evaluation by Theodore
Becker, Ph.D., a vocational rehabilitation assessment and
life care plan by Janet Hart Mott, Ph.D., and an appraisal
of economic loss by Wolfgang Franz, Ph.D., allowed Plaintiff
to blackboard damages into eight digits, enough to get
Defendant's attention if a coherent theory of liability
could be articulated.
FOCUSING ON 'The Renegade Railroad"
The balance of the lawyers' efforts was focused on
demonstrating that Plaintiff's one-time judgment error paled
in comparison to the profit-driven, corporate
irresponsibility of WATCO, eventually demonstrated to be
"the renegade railroad."
Plaintiff was hand-loading railroad ties into the front
bucket of a front-end loader on a switching yard track at
his Boise Cascade workplace when a railroad engine driven by
two employees of the local switching contractor WATCO,
rounded a bend in the track, headed for the rear of the
loader. The train crew saw an object on the track when the
engine was at least 260 feet and 18 seconds away from the
loader. The WATCO employees did not blow the engine's horn
or stop the engine before it crashed into the front-end
loader, pushing it over Plaintiff. Whether Plaintiff was a
trespasser who had no permission to be in the area was a
disputed question of fact; however, Plaintiff's counsel
argued that even assuming Plaintiff was a trespasser, WATCO
nevertheless owed him a duty of reasonable care (including
the duty to blow the train horn) once its personnel saw an
object on the track which they should have understood was a
person. Plaintiff's counsel also argued that WATCO owed
Plaintiff a general duty of reasonable care, rather than the
more restricted duty towards a trespasser, because WATCO was
an independent contractor with limited, contractually
specified duties and not a possessor of land entitled to the
benefits of premises liability law. Relevant to breach of
this duty of care was all of WATCO's negligence in employee
training, drug policy enforcement and equipment maintenance,
as well as the crew's negligence in failing to blow the horn
immediately preceding the collision.
Boise Cascade operates a papermill along the Columbia River
at Wallula. Connecting the Boise Cascade papermill with the
Union Pacific yard to the south and the Burlington Northern
yard to the north is an industrial switching yard consisting
of two parallel tracks. Spur tracks lead to eight separate
delivery points within the mill. WATCO pays young men as
little as seven dollars an hour to operate the locomotives.
Plaintiff worked as a power recovery assistant at the Boise
Cascade mill. He took chemical tests every two hours, added
chemicals when necessary and monitored the flow of
chemicals. Plaintiff was also trained and authorized to
operate a front-end loader. During slow times in the
chemical preparation room, Plaintiff would use the front-end
loader to help out around the plant.
In the fall of 1994, Plaintiff began building a fence on 10
acres of property he owned near Tri Cities. He contacted
Union Pacific about abandoned railroad ties that had been
thrown over the embankment next to the spur line.
On December 3, 1994, Plaintiff told his foreman that during
a slow part of his shift he was going to use the front-end
loader to collect and stack a load of abandoned railroad
ties. The foreman later denied that the conversation took
place or that Plaintiff ever talked to him about railroad
ties.
However, another Boise Cascade employee overheard the
foreman and Plaintiff talking about railroad ties. And after
the conversation with Plaintiff, the foreman continued his
rounds, stopping at another work site where he told two
other employees that if they needed the front-end loader
that evening, they should call Plaintiff on the radio
because Bob would be using the front-end loader. Thus,
whether Plaintiff's foreman gave permission for him to use
the front-end loader to collect abandoned railroad ties
during his shift on Boise Cascade property or whether he was
a trespasser was a hotly disputed issue.
During a lull in his work, Plaintiff called the WATCO
terminal to see if they were finished switching for the
evening. He got a recording. He then got in the front-end
loader and traveled throughout the Boise Cascade mill to the
eight locations where switching occurs to make sure
first-hand that WATCO had finished switching for the
evening. Although in-plant switching had been completed,
WATCO employees had decided to move some cars from the Union
Pacific yard at the south of the Boise Cascade mill to the
Burlington Northern yard at the north of the Boise Cascade
mill.
In the early morning hours of December 3, 1994, a single
WATCO locomotive was traveling north, in reverse, on a Boise
Cascade switch track. They had traveled over this same track
less than an hour earlier. The track bends slightly to the
right. Between the beginning and the middle of the radius of
the curve, the brakeman saw something on the track ahead.
The middle of the radius was later surveyed to be 262.5 feet
from the point of impact. Immediately, when he saw
something, he yelled "Oh, shit, something's on the rail, hit
the brakes!" and the engineer "slapped" the independent
brake into full operation.
The engine struck the front-end loader, driving it into
Plaintiff who was loading railroad ties into the bucket of
the loader.
The crewmen estimated their speed at between 5 and 10 miles
per hour. The engineer failed to blow the horn, failed to
engage the warning bell, and failed to engage the brake
sanders. He hit the independent brakes rather than the
emergency brakes, which would have automatically engaged the
brake sanders.
At the time of the accident, the front-end loader's lights
were on, including at least one working light at the rear of
the loader facing the on-coming engine. An overhead light on
a high pole was situated near the loader. Plaintiff's
illumination expert, Lowell Lazara of Olympia, who conducted
tests at the site, concluded that the front-end loader was
"plainly visible to the engineer of the railroad engine from
several hundred feet away at night. The tractor was plainly
capable of being seen, even at a glance." Nevertheless, the
crew described what they saw as "shadows", "something on the
rail", "some kind of shadow".
Charles Culver, a railroad engineer from League City, Texas,
conducted stopping tests at the site using a similar WATCO
engine. At 10 miles an hour, using various combinations of
emergency braking, independent braking and sanders, and
sounding the horn as part of each test, the engineer was
able to stop the engine in all instances between 57 feet and
89 feet 10 inches, and between 6.09 and 8.9 seconds. Leonard
Laketek Ph.D., Plaintiff's consulting physicist, created a
computerized model which then put the approach speed at over
20 miles per hour, twice the speed limit.
After recreating conditions on the site at the time of the
accident, Plaintiff's expert audiologist David Lipscomb
Ph.D. concluded that "had the horn been sounded . . . .
alerting would have occurred when the locomotive was more
than 200 feet from the point of impact."
WATCO management ultimately admitted that the horn should
have been sounded to warn Plaintiff. And the engineer
himself admitted that Plaintiff would have heard the horn.
Even the WATCO Location Manager agreed Plaintiff would have
"definitely" heard the horn had it been blown.
Using these deposition admissions and expert opinions,
Plaintiff's counsel argued that, even assuming the worst
possible case for Plaintiff - that Plaintiff was a
trespasser at the time of the accident - WATCO nevertheless
owed Plaintiff a duty of reasonable care once the train crew
saw an object indicating the substantial chance of a
trespasser on the track.
Since the crew had driven the engine over the accident site
less than an hour before, and since the front-end loader had
at least one light on facing the engine at the time of the
collision, what they saw on the track had to include the
substantial chance of a human presence. How else could
something with a light on it that was not there less than an
hour before have gotten there?
Plaintiff's counsel relied on Power v. Union Pacific
Railroad Company, 655 F.2d 1380 (1981), which held that
the engineer of a Union Pacific train that struck and killed
a pedestrian trespassing on the company's tracks had a duty
to use reasonable care once he saw the trespasser. The Ninth
Circuit had in turn relied on Potts v. Amis, 62 Wn.2d
777 (1963), in which Washington adopted a standard of
reasonable care under the circumstances for a licensee
injured by a landowner's activity, as opposed to a passive
condition of the land. The Ninth Circuit held that
Washington would apply the same standard to a known
trespasser, following the Restatement of Torts, § 336.
The crew saw an object on the track 260 feet away. Traveling
at 10 miles an hour, the engine would take 18 seconds to
reach the object. The engine's horn would have given clear
warning at the distance at which the object was perceived.
Sounding the horn as soon as the object was spotted would
have given Plaintiff 18 seconds to get out of the way. The
horn could be sounded by a simple motion of the arm pulling
a lever -- as quick as the clap of hands. Yet, the engineer
did not blow the horn.
In Power, the trespasser was readily identifiable by
the engineer, and thus, the court did not address the issue
of the responsibility of an operator of an engine who sees
an object on the tracks but cannot tell for certain that it
is a person. This question was, however, squarely dealt with
by Rustay v. Consolidated Rail Corp., 775 F.Supp. 161
(D.N.J., 1991), and by Restatement, §336, Comment b. In
Rustay, Defendant's train struck a drunk and trespassing
Plaintiff who was lying on the tracks. The engineer saw what
he thought was debris or garbage on the track, but did not
immediately apply the brakes or sound the horn. When someone
is carrying on a dangerous activity such as operating a
railroad engine, the operator must assume that a perceived
object is a person and act accordingly if there is a
substantial chance that this is the case. Dangerous activity
commands greater caution by the actor.
Although whether Plaintiff had permission from his foreman
to collect railroad ties or was an unauthorized trespasser
began as a hotly contested issue, careful scholarship
demonstrated that even assuming he was a trespasser, once
the crew saw something on the track ahead which they should
reasonably have concluded was a person, WATCO had the duty
to sound the train horn and warn the assumed trespasser of
their onrushing presence. They failed to do so.
Plaintiff's counsel also argued that, as an independent
contractor operating a locomotive on land it did not own or
possess, WATCO owed Plaintiff a duty of reasonable care,
rather than only the lesser care owed to a trespasser. Under
Washington law, rules of premise liability and Plaintiff's
status at the time of the accident were irrelevant to the
duty owed by WATCO to Plaintiff.
Unlike most railroads, which operate on tracks they own,
WATCO did not own the industrial switching yard on which it
operated around the Boise Cascade plant. As an independent
contractor, WATCO did not own or possess the land;
therefore, it owed Plaintiff a duty of reasonable care.
Plaintiff's status vis-à-vis Boise Cascade, which possessed
the land under a lease, was irrelevant to the duty owed by
WATCO. Ingersoll v. DeBartolo, Inc., 123 Wn.2d 649,
869 P.2d 1014 (1994).
Once a reasonable care standard was established, an
aggressive discovery campaign demonstrated that WATCO fell
woefully short of meeting the standard.
WATCO's training did not meet the standard of reasonable
care. WATCO provided no classroom training to the switchmen
who operated their locomotives. WATCO provided only
on-the-job training. The on-the-job training followed no
standard format and did not even include an informal list of
items to cover. The trainee merely rode with and observed
another switchman who himself had learned to operate the
locomotive under the same unorganized, unfocused training
method. The "engineer" who was operating the engine when it
struck Plaintiff was given only three days of on-the-job
training before he was allowed to operate the 238,000 pound
locomotive solo. He never even learned how to start the
engine; it was always left running for him.
The on-the-job training was provided primarily by an
Assistant Location Manager. At the time he trained the two
crewmen, he was not an FRA certified engineer. In the year
prior to teaching them how to operate a locomotive, he was
reprimanded for speeding in the Boise Cascade mill. Shortly
after completing their on-the-job training, he was
terminated for failing a drug test.
During the period of his training, the engineer could not
have passed a drug test. WATCO did not give him a drug test
prior to allowing him to begin running the engine. Following
the Plaintiff's collision, the engineer quit rather than
submit to a drug test. Six months later, he re-applied for
work at WATCO, was given a pre-employment drug test, and
failed it.
WATCO's maintenance program did not meet the standard of
reasonable care. WATCO's Location Manager was the person in
charge of maintaining the locomotives. Prior to his
employment at WATCO, he had no experience repairing
locomotives. He learned as he went. In order to keep
materials flowing to Boise Cascade, WATCO used locomotives
which had known defects. "Yes, there has been times [sic]
that we have had to get switches done to keep the plant
going, and I have used locomotives that had defects on
them."
In the year prior to the collision, the two locomotives used
by WATCO developed numerous problems: a warning bell that
worked only occasionally; brake sanders that worked only
occasionally; malfunctioning headlights; inadequate motive
power; inoperable speedometer; broken engine compartment
heater; partially inoperable brakes.
The inspection reports throughout the year list numerous
defects, often repeatedly, and one report, in the space for
defects, simply relates, "Same ol', same ol'".
At the time of the collision with Plaintiff, the engine was
operating without a functioning speedometer and without
functioning brake sanders. (Brake sanders allow the engine
to stop more quickly.) WATCO is unsure whether the warning
bell was operating on the night of the collision, since the
crew did not engage the warning bell.
WATCO laid the ground work for this accident through a
systematic course of irresponsible conduct, and then its
untrained employees had the last opportunity to prevent the
tragic accident by simply blowing the train's warning horn.
THE MEDIATION
The comparative negligence allowed counsel to obtain
substantial discounts from subrogation carriers who
justifiably feared no recovery without compromise, leaving
the recovery in Plaintiff's pocket, not just in that of his
medical providers.
WATCO, which operates switch yards in numerous industrial
facilities in several states, had been operating without
certified engineers because of their unilateral reading of
49 CFR, which exempts "a plant railroad" from federal
regulation. Plaintiff's counsel put this strained reading in
issue. Losing this favorable interpretation of the statute
in this case of first impression threatened to force WATCO
to comply with the Federal Railroad Safety Act. They
preferred to settle prior to resolution of the issue.
The case was filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern
District of Washington as CS-97-0105 JLQ. Plaintiff's
counsel moved for summary judgment on liability against
WATCO based on the above reasoning. The case settled for
$3.5 million before mediator David A. Thorner.
Plaintiff was represented by Eagle Patron Dean Brett of
Brett & CoatsLLP, Bellingham, and Timothy W. Mahoney,
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