— The appellant commenced an action in the
The appellant upon the trial gave evidence tending to prove the facts alleged in his complaint. It appears from the bill of exceptions that said Peter Grant was last seen alive on the evening previous to the said 27th day of November, 1881; that on the morning of that day he was found dead, lying in the mud and water in front of said street, opposite to where a railing had been off for some time. 'It also appears that said deceased had his lodgings at a house on said street, and that when last seen, upon the evening previous to his death, he was at the Occident Hotel, in Astoria; that between 10 and 11 o’clock at night he left there with the evident intention of going to his lodgings; that his route would naturally be along said street, which was considerably encumbered with lumber at the time. The evidence offered was doubtless sufficient to authorize the inference that
The appellant having rested his case, the respondents moved the court for a nonsuit, upon the grounds, (1) that the evidence was insufficient to entitle the appellant to a recovery; (2) that the appellant had failed to show that the deceased was without fault at the time of the accident; that the appellant was required to show that deceased was, at the time of his death, free from contributory negligence, before a recovery could be had. The Circuit Court granted the motion, and the appellant was nonsuited, and judgment entered against him for costs, from which judgment this appeal is taken.
The first ground of the motion for the nonsuit was wholly untenable. The question whether the evidence was sufficient to entitle the appellant to a recovery was for the jury, and not the court. To authorize the court to nonsuit a plaintiff, the latter must fail to prove a cause sufficient to be submitted to the jury. It must be such a case that, if the jury were to find a verdict for the plaintiff, the court could be required to set it aside for want of evidence to support it. (Civ. Code, §§ 243, 244.) It would have to be a case where there was a total failure of proof of some material allegation of the complaint, which appears, from the bil] of exceptions, not to have been the fact in this case. I do not suppose the nonsuit was granted upon that ground. It was not so claimed on the argument, and I think the counsel on both sides concede that it was upon the second ground of the motion that it was allowed, and that the circuit judge, in allowing it, followed what he supposed to have been held in Walsh v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co. 10 Oreg. 250. The impression seems to have prevailed, to some extent, at least, that this court there held that a plaintiff would not be entitled to recover in an action for negligence without showing affirma
“In actions for negligence, the burden of proof always rests upon the party charging it. He must prove that the accident was caused by the wrongful act, omission, or neglect of the defendant, and that the injury of which he complains was not the result of his own negligence, and the want of ordinary care and caution.”
A casual observation of this language might justify the impression referred to; but when considered in connection with the tacts of that case, and with other portions of the opinion, it would hardly be warranted. The plaintiff in the case referred to was a brakeman on the defendant’s train of cars. The track had been widened from a narrow gauge to a standard gauge, and the effect was to place the rail on one side of the bed nearer the water-tank located on the road. The train approached the point opposite the tank in the night, while the plaintiff was on the train attending to his duties. He was ignorant of the nearness of the water-tank to the track; heard a noise ahead that excited his suspicion that something might be wrong, and put his head out of the window to discover the cause. In the act of doing that, in consequence of the proximity of the tank to the track, his head came in collision with the timbers which supported the tank, and thereby he received the injury complained of. When he attempted to prove his cause of action upon the* trial, these facts, of course, all came out upon his own showing, and the Circuit Court before whom the trial was had, being of the opinion that the putting his head out of the window as mentioned was carelessness upon his part which contributed to the injury, nonsuited him. The question then came before this court as to whether the nonsuit was properly granted, and
“ To entitle, then, the plaintiff to recover, conceding the negligence of the defendant in not removing the water-tank to the proper distance after widening the track, it was incumbent on him to prove, when the accident occurred, that he exercised that ordinary care which a party ought to observe under the particular circumstances under which it is to be exercised.”
It will be seen that the injury to the plaintiff in that case was the result of his own direct act; if he had not put his head out of the window it would not have collided with the framework of the tank; and that, prima fade, he occasioned it himself. Whether the act was careless and negligent or not depended upon the facts, which it devolved upon him, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, to prove;' and unless he established that the duty of his position made it necessary and proper to extend his head out of the window at the time, he had no case. The Circuit Court thought he had no right to do so under any circumstances; but this court, in view of the fact that the plaintiff was a brakeman on the train, and was required to constantly keep a lookout to avoid danger, and that there was evidence in the case tending to prove that it was a customary habit for brakemen to do so, concluded that he ought not to have been nonsuited, and therefore set it aside and ordered a new trial. It is very evident to my mind that the language of the opinion referred to was intended to apply to the state of facts mentioned, and not to lay down any general rule that would be applicable to any state of facts that might appear in that character of cases. I think it has always been understood by this court that contributory negligence is a defense, and must be averred as such. At the same time, the authorities agree that if it appears in such a case, upon the plaintiff’s own showing, that his own carelessness helped to produce the injury he complains of, he cannot recover. And I do not believe it would be any departure from the rule requiring such a defense to be
In the case at bar the court should not have nonsuited the plaintiff. He made out a case sufficient for the jury, and they had a right to determine whether the conduct of the defendants in leaving the street encumbered in the manner described by the witnesses, and allowing a section of the railing to remain off, was negligence dr not; whether the deceased came to his death in consequence thereof, and whether he might in some manner have contributed to the negligence, if any such existed. The latter could not be inferred except from some proof of circumstances. It is not presumable that a person will do careless and negligent acts that will jeopardize his own life; and yet, if the deceased knew the condition of the street, and it was a dark, rainy night, as some of the witnesses say it was, it might have been very imprudent for him to have attempted to travel the street under the circumstances. However that may have been,
The judgment must be reversed, the nonsuit set aside, and a new trial had.