57 P. 1063 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It is not contended by counsel for the company that its engineer might not have discovered the cattle by the exercise of reasonable dili
We are unable to distinguish, under the facts in this case, as to the duties of both plaintiff and defendant, between a private crossing and an ordinary highway ; at least, the plaintiff was not a trespasser, and the defendant company owed to him some duty, and that duty, as we .view it, was to exercise ordinary care to avoid injury to the plaintiff or his property in the lawful and reasonable use of his private way. The company had actual knowledge of the existence of the way, and we must presume that it had knowledge of the use which plaintiff made of it and had made of it during a period of more than twenty years ; and, knowing these facts, it was bound to use ordinary diligence, such as a prudent man would exercise under the same circumstances, to avoid any collision with the plaintiff’s cattle upon a private way or doing them any injury in the operation of its road. It was the duty of the engineer to be on the lookout for obstructions upon the track, and especially so at this crossing at this particular time of day. It had been the custom of the plaintiff during all the years mentioned to drive his cattle across the track from his pasture to his farm buildings. The evidence is clear and uncontradicted that had the engineer been_on
That the reciprocal duties of the plaintiff and defendant were the same with respect to this private way as in ordinary cases arising at the crossing of a highway would seem to follow from the character of the plaintiff’s right respecting the private way. He had the same right there to cross and recross with his cattle, his teams and his farming tools, from one part of his farm to the other, that the public have at public highways. Assuming, as we may in this case, that the company acquired its right, its easement, over the highway by condemnation proceedings, the fee remained in the plaintiff, with a right to the land for every purpose not incompatible with the rights of the railroad company. He had a right to reasonable and necessary crossings for the use of his farm operations. (Kansas Cent. Ry. Co. v. Allen, 22 Kan. 292; Atchison & N. R. Co. v. Gough, 29 id. 94; K. C. & E. Rld. Co. v. Kregelo, 32 id. 612, 5 Pac. 15; C. K. & W. Rld. Co. v. Cosper, 42 id. 565, 22 Pac. 634.)
The plaintiff was not a mere licensee. His right was a paramount one pertaining to his freehold. It was absolute and recognized fully by the defendant company. So that, we think, we are justified in saying that the respective obligations and duties of the parties respecting the use of this right of way were the same as between the railroad company and the public respecting an ordinary highway. The plaintiff
In support of the contention that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, our attention is called to the following cases : Railroad Co. v. Holland, 60 Kan. 209, 56 Pac. 6, and cases therein referred to by the court, and Adams v. A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co., 46 Kan. 164, 26 Pac. 439. These decisions, in the view of the writer of this opinion, came dangerously near accomplishing that which the lawmaking power of the state could not accomplish by reason of the constitutional inhibition, i. e., depriving the parties litigant of the right of a trial by jury of a question of fact, and should not be held to apply in any case, unless the facts are such as to bring it clearly within the line of those decisions. No such exigency arises in this case. The question of contributory negligence, as a question of
In this case it is contended that this court should disregard the evidence of the witnesses in behalf of the plaintiff in respect to the management of the herd of cattle run into by the railroad company, and draw a deduction from the fact that, if the plaintiff or his servant in charge of the cattle had been upon or near the right of way of the company, by looking they could have seen the train approaching a distance of three-quarters of a mile away. We are asked to disregard all the facts and circumstances and base our conclusion upon that fact alone, and say, as the supreme court said in the cases cited, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. If we did this we would go even beyond any case cited by counsel in support of the contentions of this railway company. It is doubtless true that if the plaintiff’s servants had been upon the track, or near the track, out of line of any obstructions shown by the evidence to exist, they could have seen the train three-quarters of a mile or possibly a mile away, had it at the time been approaching. The evidence was that it was running at the rate of forty or forty-five miles an hour. The jury so specially found. It was running without steam, upon a down grade, and noiselessly. The plaintiff’s son, who had charge of the herd, in going to bring the cattle, by his testimony, looked carefully, listened carefully, at all three of the railroad lines as he crossed them •respectively on the way to the pasture gate. He