25 Or. 32 | Or. | 1893
Opinion by
The errors assigned relate principally to certain instructions given by the court, to which exceptions were reserved. Before proceeding to discuss the points raised, a brief outline of some of the facts is essential, to show the location of the street where the accident occurred, the nature of the cut through which the cars passed, and the circumstances connected therewith. Other facts, as far as necessary, will be stated in connection with the points discussed. The record discloses that the defendant’s railroad passes along Margaretta Avenue, a street of the
The plaintiff testified that at about nine or ten o’clock on the night of the twenty-fourth day of September, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, he was walking along the railroad track, and that, when he was near the middle of said cut, one of the defendant’s trains, drawn by a dummy or locomotive, suddenly approached him, running at a speed of eighteen or twenty miles an hour, from a northerly direction, without having any headlight, or giving any warning or signal, and that he had no notice of its approach until it was within one hundred feet of him; that he endeavored to stop the train by hallooing, and tried to escape, but owing to the fact that he was very much excited, and in great fear at his perilous position, he failed to avoid the train, which struck him, causing the injuries alleged; that before he entered the cut, he looked up and down the railway track, and also listened for the approach of any trains that might be coming, and that he did not see or hear any; that the track was a tangent for a considerable distance either side of said cut where the accident occurred; and that the night was dark and foggy. The defendant’s evidence
We are now prepared to consider those portions of the charge to which exceptions Were taken. The portion first excepted to is as follows: “When men walk laterally upon a railroad track, it is their duty to look and listen for the approach of trains. It is their duty, if they discover a train approaching, if possible, to leave the track. It is their duty to do it. It is not the time for them to remain and speculate about the probabilities of being run over, but if it is in their power to leave the track, it should be done. If they fail to do it when possible, it is negligence on the part of such persons. If you believe from the evidence adduced in this case, that this plaintiff was aware of the approach of that train by any of the modes that I have mentioned,—if he, in fact, knew that the train was approaching,—and that he could have got away from the train, even though it might be by throwing himself prostrate upon the incline of the cut, and he failed to use such means of self-preservation as were obvious and were at hand, then he should be charged guilty of negligence, that contributed to the injury which he sustained.” The next assignment of error is so closely akin to the one just stated that it will he convenient to consider them together. It is as follows: “A man cannot go deliberately, and with his eyes
The objection to the first instruction is that it more properly applies to a person walking along a railroad track where there is no grade or obstacle to prevent his escape from an approaching train, and who is injured by collision therewith, than to one walking on a track in a cut through which trains run where escape is difficult, and the perils of one’s position, when realized, would be apt to destroy his equanimity of judgment, and thereby increase his liability to injury. Hence, it is claimed, that the instruction, as given, holds the plaintiff to a degree of care and circumspection of conduct that the circumstances of the case do not warrant. The objection to the other instruction is that it assumes that the defendant was not responsible for the perilous position in which the plaintiff was placed when the accident occurred, on the theory that if the plaintiff was familiar with the cut and its surroundings, the time when the trains passed, the difficulty of getting out of their way, and the dangers that would attend the journey through it, and knew there was another road which was safe, and parallel with it, and he chose to pursue the dangerous way, that he should be deemed to assume the risks incident to it, and should take the consequences of his hardihood. This objection includes an instruction not excepted to, but which connects the two already set out, and helps to show their relationship, and is so treated in the briefs. This instruction is as follows: “ Furthermore, there is another
It is shown that the locomotive was supplied with the usual appliances for giving warning signals, but the evidence is conflicting as to whether the headlight was lighted; that there was room for a person between the track and the bank of the cut, without coming in collision with a passing train, and that there were places along the bank which one could clamber over; that the cut was in a street through which the railroad ran; and that parallel with it was a road on the bank with which the plaintiff was acquainted, and over which, though uneven, he could have passed with safety; that the track was a tangent for a considerable distance on either side of the cut; that plaintiff was familiar with the cut and its surroundings, and knew and understood the dangers connected with the journey through it, as well as the limited means of escape from an approaching' train. The instructions proceed upon the -hypothesis that a railroad is a place of danger, and that it is the duty of one venturing upon its track, or a cut through which it passes, which may be used as a pathway, to make vigilant use of his eyes and ears, and that it is his duty, also, to leave the track, if possible, when he discovers a train approaching; and, if he fail to do so and be injured thereby, that he would be guilty of negligence. After this announce
We do not think the instructions are amenable to the objections raised or that they misstate the facts upon that phase of the law to which they are intended to apply. The vice of the plaintiff’s first objection is that it assumes that the instruction applies to a state of facts materially different from those shown to exist herein; that there was no evidence tending to show the approach of the. train, or that there was any obvious means of escape from collision available to the plaintiff, and that, without any knowledge of his surroundings, he was suddenly placed in the presence of unlooked-for danger, when prudent action or deliberate judgment is not expected or required. As to the other objection, the instruction only assumes that the defendant is not liable for the injury if the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. It simply goes to the effect that one cannot voluntarily place himself in a place of danger, and then throw the responsibility for the resulting injury upon another.
The judgment must be affirmed. Affirmed.