59 Kan. 437 | Kan. | 1898
This action grows out of a collision of a freight train of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company with one of the Union Pacific Railway Company, near Linwood in Leavenworth County, on the second of January, 1894, by which William Martin, the plaintiff’s intestate, was killed.
At the time of the collision, six trains were moving eastward over the' Union Pacific Railway, in close proximity to each other. They were designated as Union Pacific number 14, Rock Island first 30, Union Pacific first 12, Rock Island second 30, Union Pacific second 12, and Rock Island number 32. Union Pacific number 14 was in the lead, and the others followed in order as above stated.’ Martin was a passenger in
It appears that the trains of the Rock Island Company were operated over the line of the Union Pacific Company, between Topeka and Kansas City, under some kind of a lease, which was not introduced in evidence. Rules governing the movement of trains were promulgated by the Union Pacific Company, and the telegraph operators and train dispatchers were employed by that company ; but the trainmen on the Rock Island trains were employed by the Rock Island Company. The plaintiff charged negligence in the management of both the colliding trains. The fact that the plaintiff’s intestate was killed in the collision was conceded, and there was no serious dispute over the proposition that it resulted from the negligence of the employees, in charge of one or the other or both of the trains. Each defendant, however, denied its own liability, and sought to cast the responsibility on the other. The jury rendered a verdict against both for $10,000, on which judgment was entered. They also returned answers to special questions submitted on behalf of each company.
In answer to questions submitted on behalf of the Rock Island Company, the jury found most of the facts as above stated,' and also that as Union Pacific
In answer to special questions submitted by the receivers, the jury found that the collision occurred about 1266 feet east of the west point of the curve before mentioned ; that the track was straight from the west point of the curve for a distance of about a mile and a quarter; that an engineer on a locomotive situated at the west end of this straight piece of track could have had an unobstructed view of the tail lights on a train located at any point east of him on- the straight piece of track ; and that the employees of the Rock Island company on train second 30 could have had an unobstructed and continuous view of the tail lights of Union Pacific train number first 12 for the distance of about a mile and a half west of the point of collision ; that the Rock Island train could have been stopped within from 900 to 1100 feet from the place where the engineer first saw the tail lights of the Union Pacific train ; that he saw the tail lights when within about 1400 feet of the train; that both the front and rear brakemen of the Rock Island train saw the tail lights when the trains were still further apart, and that the train ran twice its length after the rear brakeman saw the tail lights before he called the attention of any one to the train ahead; that the Union Pacific train was running at the rate of about ten miles an hour, and the Rock Island train about eighteen miles an hour at the time of collision; that within a couple of seconds after the engineer of the Rock Island train saw the tail lights ahead of him he saw a lantern swung across the track from the rear of the Union Pacific caboose,
Separate petitions in error, charging numerous errors, are filed in this court by the Rock Island Company and the Receivers of the Union Pacific Company, and elaborate briefs are presented on behalf of each discussing at length the errors alleged. The points appearing worthy of mention in the opinion will be discussed in the order of their statement in the briefs, beginning with those urged by counsel for the Rock Island.
The testimony of D. C. Bevard and W. E.Donnelly set out in the brief appears to be objectionable in form, but the jury in their special findings show that they did not accept it as true ; for they found against the statements made by these witnesses. The testimony of Whittaker, of which complaint is made, is quite unimportant. There was no error in the admission of the American Mortality Tables. They were shown to be in use, and they are recognized as competent evidence to prove the expectancy of human life.
Complaint is made of the following instruction :
“ 10. It was the duty of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company in the operation of its trains over the track of the Union Pacific Railway Company between Topeka and Kansas City, with the permission of or under some arrangement with the Receivers of the said Union Pacific Company, to see that they were managed and run with reference to all known, or reasonably to be anticipated surroundings, and to use all reasonably practicable care and caution as far as human foresight could go under the circumstances, to prevent its trains from running into the trains of the Receivers of the Union Pacific Railway Company, which were being operated at the same*444 time over the same track. The want of such care and caution on the part of the servants and employees of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company whom it had placed in charge and control of any of its said trains would be negligence on the part of said company.”
There is no merit in the criticism of the thirteenth instruction.
The only ones of the cases cited that seem to us to support this contention are those from the 52d and 78th Federal Reporter. Our own construction of the Federal statute on the subject (section 2, page 612, Supplement to the Revised Statutes of the United States), is that it was necessary for both defendants to join in the petition for a removal. They were charged with jointly causing the death of the plaintiff's intestate. The controversy was not separable, and the Receivers alone had no right to removal on the ground that a federal question was involved. No federal question was in fact presented by the pleadings nor litigated at the trial. It was the ordinary action under our statute for wrongfully causing the death of the plaintiff's intestate. In the view that both defendants must join in the petition for removal we are supported by able Federal judges in the cases of Thompson v. C. St. P. & K. C. Rly. Co., 60 Fed. 773, and Shearing v. Trumbull, 75 id. 33; and by Texas & Pac. Rly. Co. v. Young, 27 S.W. 145; Black’s Dillon on Removal of Causes, § 77.
“ This ticket is not issued to the holder hereof as a passenger, but is issued at his special instance and request in order to enable him to accompany a stock shipment on a freight or stock-train in order to care for the stock en o'oute, and the holder hereof agrees that the company shall not be liable to him in any manner as a passenger, nor for any accident resulting to him from the operation of the train in which he rides, or from the manner of handling the same by the employees of the company, and he further agrees that the Company shall not be liable to him for injury to the person or property of the person using this ticket, unless the same is caused by the gross negligence of the Company, and he further agrees that in no case shall the liability of the Company exceed the sum of $1000.”
The other questions do not appear to be of sufficient importance to require elaboration here. The liability of both companies was established at the trial. No error is disclosed which could have affected the verdict. That both train crews were careless and failed to take reasonable precautions in the management of their trains is clearly and abundantly shown.
The judgment is affirmed.