19 Wash. 340 | Wash. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages of the defendant for the death of her husband. Before argument on the merits a motion was made by respondent to strike an additional brief filed by one of the general attorneys for the company, but who was not an attorney of record in the case. The brief having been filed irregularly and out of time, the motion to strike was granted. Also, the appellant moved to strike several orders made by the court some months after the settlement of the statement of facts, granting a motion to strike therefrom an exception to one of the instructions. The statement was filed and served in January, 1898. Ho amendments having been proposed, after the lapse of time
The verdict recovered was in the sum of $30,000 and was largely excessive. The deceased was not a skilled workman, but an ordinary laborer forty-two years of age, and had not earned at any time to exceed $50 per month, and that as a railroad laborer. At the time of his death, and for some time previous thereto, he was working in a saloon at $30 a month. Were it only a question of excessive damages and no error of law, the court might have followed the plan sometimes adopted of allowing the plaintiff to elect to take a lesser sum; but there are other and more important questions raised, going to the right of the plaintiff to recover at all, and it will be necessary to make a fuller statement of facts.
The defendant was the owner of an irregular tract of land of some extent near the business portion of the city of Sprague, which had been used by it as a yard and site for its railroad shops. In the summer of 1895 the shops were destroyed by fire and temporary structures built, which were used for some time and then removed and the yards abandoned except for a pump house. The property was
We are of the opinion that this case falls clearly within the principle of many others decided by this court, where no recovery was allowed as a matter of law. It having been shown that the deceased had knowledge of the excavation as aforesaid, and it also appearing that he had been in the habit of had frequently crossed the tract in question up to the time of the injury, and the pit being open and exposed and nothing to prevent its being seen, at least when near it, it must be presumed that he had knowledge of its existence and was chargeable with negligence in attempting to cross when it was so dark that he could not see the pit or follow the paths which had been used by people in crossing the tract.
Another defense urged against the right- of plaintiff to recover was that deceased was a trespasser upon the tract and had been warned by the agents of the company to keep off from it and not to cross it. It is conceded that notice to this effect had been given him, but it is contended that these warnings, with one exception, which will be noticed later, were given soon after the property was destroyed by fire or its use discontinued, which was some months previous to the injury, and it is contended that they were given only for the purpose of protecting the company’s property from being stolen. Notices were posted, warning all peopie to keep off of the premises, and many of them, including the deceased, had been told personally to keep off. The respondent contends that, as it appears that the purpose of the company in giving these notices was to protect its property from theft, it conveyed no notice to the deceased that there vras any danger in crossing the tract, and that, in any event, the defendant was liable for suffering the pit to remain exposed. There was testimony
Gordon and Dunbar, JJ., concur.
Anders and Beavis, JJ., concur in the result.