136 P. 1059 | Mont. | 1913
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
A jury having returned a verdict for damages against the defendants for a personal injury alleged to have been inflicted upon plaintiff through their negligence, they have appealed from the judgment entered thereon and an order denying them a new trial. The accident occurred at Huntley, a small village in Yellowstone county, at the junction of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway with that of the defendant railway company. Both roads extend east and west through the village, the companies making use of the same depot or station, the track of the defendant company, with platform for the receipt of freight and the accommodation of passengers, being on the side toward the north, that of the other company on the side toward the south. Immediately north of the defendant company’s track is a driveway of ordinary width, and persons going to or coming from the station on that side are compelled to cross the driveway and the track. For the accommodation of those who approach the station on foot the defendant company has provided a gravel or cinder path extending from the principal street of the village to the north line of the railway. From the end of the path the waiting-room, which is at the west end of the station building, is reached by going directly south to the east end of the platform and thence west, or by going southwest to the platform to a point in front of the door opening into the waiting-room.
The complaint alleges that the defendant company was guilty of negligence in permitting the wire to remain where it was, inasmuch as it must have known that the wire was there and that it was a source of danger to persons going to and from the station. But during the trial the issues in this behalf were eliminated from the ease. The specific charge upon which recovery was had is the following: ‘ ‘ That the said defendant Mc-Donough, so acting as engineer as aforesaid, in the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, could have seen plaintiff so upon said track, as aforesaid, and plaintiff alleges, on information and belief, that the said McDonough did see him on said track as aforesaid, in seasonable time to have stopped said locomotive and train so as to avoid striking plaintiff, but the defendant company, acting through the said McDonough as engineer, and the said defendant McDonough, wholly failed and neglected to stop said locomotive engine and train, and carelessly and negligently drove and ran said locomotive engine and train upon-and over said plaintiff, so on said track as aforesaid, thereby crushing both of his feet to such an extent that it became necessary to amputate the same, which was thereafter done.”
Counsel for defendants open the argument in their brief with the following statement: “The question is presented on this appeal whether a liability for damages exists under the doctrine of ‘last clear chance,’ where a person is injured upon a railroad track, at a place where he has no right to be and where his presence could not be reasonably expected or anticipated, because of the failure of the engineer in charge of the train to discover such person’s position and peril upon the traek in time sufficient to stop the train and avoid injuring him. ’ ’ Assuming the position that plaintiff was a trespasser upon the defendant company’s track, and that the evidence fails to show that the en
A person, however, may be put in a position of peril by circumstances for which he is not responsible, and for this reason is not chargeable with antecedent negligence. To illustrate:
This brings us to the question whether the evidence from any
Nor do we think that the evidence justifies the conclusion that
The district court should have directed a verdict for the defendant. The judgment and order are accordingly reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
(Submitted November 17, 1913. Decided December 24, 1913.)
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is said by counsel for plaintiff in the brief accompanying 'their motion for a rehearing, that the court based its decision upon a proposition that was not argued orally nor discussed in the briefs, viz.: that “train No. 3, not being scheduled to stop at Huntley station, the engineer was not required to keep a reasonable lookout and to that extent owed no duty to respondent on the track, although not there as a trespasser. ” It is now insisted that since Huntley is a union station, it was the duty of the engineer, as a matter of law, to anticipate the presence of persons there at any time and keep a reasonable lookout for them, because, though trains Nos. 3 and 4 were not scheduled to stop, trains upon the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway, either on schedule time or belated, might be there, receiving or discharging passengers. The evidence does not disclose anything touching the movement of trains on the latter railway. It may be that the schedule was such that trains reached and left the station only in the daytime, and that at the hour at which defendant’s train reached the station it could not reasonably be anticipated that anyone would be there. If this was the fact, the duty to keep a lookout did not arise, for it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that it is the duty of a railway company to keep a lookout without reference to conditions existing at the
Counsel have entered into a discussion of the last clear chance rule and its application to particular cases suggested. In the original opinion we distinguished generally the cases in which it applies from those in which it does not. We think the rule is stated there as it is generally accepted and understood, and does not in any way limit the liability of a railway company for the failure of those in charge of its trains to keep a lookout upon approaching public crossings, or stations, or any other places where the presence of persons must reasonably be anticipated. Counsel would have us lay down a rule by which the
The motion is denied.