93 P. 356 | Or. | 1908
Opinion by
1. The first and principal error relied upon to reverse the judgment is the denial by the court of defendant’s motion for . a nonsuit to the second cause of action. In this State contributory negligence is a matter of defense, and the burden of establishing it is on the defendant:- Johnston v. O. S. L. Ry. Co. 23 Or. 94 (31 Pac. 283); Grant v. Baker, 12 Or. 329 (7 Pac. 318). But, if plaintiff’s declaration or evidence establishes his own contributory negligence, it bars his recovery,- no matter where the burden rests: 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. (2 ed.), 454; Tucker v. Northern Terminal Co. 41 Or. 82 (68 Pac. 426); Scott v. Oregon Ry. & N. Co. 14 Or. 211 (13 Pac. 98).
To support its contention, counsel ■ for defendant urges with much earnestness that • the pleadings on the part of plaintiff admit that the cattle went upon the track while under the immediate care, custody and control of plaintiff. This arises, it is argued, from the form of the denial used in the reply. What the pleader intended to admit by excluding the quoted words from the effect of his denial, is doubtful. Defendant’s counsel arrive at their conclusion by a strict construction of the language quoted, and contend that such should be the rule. But, if their assumption as to the rule of construction and their interpretation of' the implied admission be correct, the result would have entitled defendant to a judgment on the pleadings, which they should have asked before going to trial, and not wait ,to raise the question on motion for nonsuit.
“It has been held,” says Mr. Justice Thayer, in Specht v. Allen, 12 Or. 117-122 (6 Pac. 494, 495), “that when a pleading did not contain a cause of action or defense, as the case might be, and the objection to it was made for the first time 'at the trial by opposing the introduction of evidence to support it, the party would be deemed to have waived any objection to its sufficiency. I am of the opinion that the party in such case should be compelled to resort to a motion for judgment, notwithstanding the verdict, in case one were to be rendered against him, as the party interposing the pleading ought, when it had not been demurred to, to be entitled to the presumptions a verdict in his favor would afford. That appears to me to be the course the code intends should be pursued. But, on the other hand, where a party has no sufficient pleading to stand upon, and judgment has gone against him, he is not in a favorable condition to ask for- its reversal, particularly where a verdict would not have cured the defect. An appellate court in such a case would, I think, consistently determine that the error had not injured him.”
So, then, in this instance, the reply should be construed as if . the question arose upon a motion by defendant for a judgment, notwithstanding the verdict, that is, liberally, so that, if possible, the verdict may be sustained.
3. Under these limitations, we are constrained to hold that the language used in the reply was intended to mean no more than that certain cows of the plaintiff were at the time of the accident under the care, custody and control of plaintiff, not that they were under his care, custody or. control at the time they went upon the track and right of way of the defendant. When so construed and applied to the testimony hereinafter considered, plaintiff has relieved himself from any necessary inference of negligence on his part. But defendant is in no better condition, even if the language of the reply be construed strictly. A party who relies upon a technical defect is sub
4. The admission, claimed by defendant to be included in the language of the reply above quoted, could not arise, except that reference be made to the affirmative matter of the answer to interpret it. The words “certain cows of the plaintiff” of themselves do not necessarily mean the cows mentioned in the complaint upon which the cause of action is based. The answer contains the same language, and there is nothing elsewhere therein that identifies the “certain cows of the. plaintiff” to be those described in the complaint. For all that appears upon the face of the pleadings, the averments of the answer may be true, and yet be no bar to a recovery on the cause of action set forth in the complaint. Plaintiff may have had another and different cause of action, which for some reason he did not see fit to include in his complaint.
It necessarily follows that upon a strict construction of the answer, the defense of contributory negligence is not in this case; at least defendant, when judgment has gone against him, is not in a favorable position to ask for its reversal for this particular alleged error: Specht v. Allen, 12 Or. 117 (6 Pac. 494). Assuming, however, that the issue of contributory negligence is made by the answer, we will now examine plaintiff’s testimony and ascertain whether any indisputable inference can be drawn from the uncontradicted facts which disclosed the omission or-commission of any act by plaintiff or his servant, which the law adjudges negligent. The facts disclosed by the record are: That plaintiff operates a dairy in the vicinity of Sumpter, and had in his herd about 38 cows. That in the month of August. 1906, he pastured his cows for the most part on a farm called in the record the “Jett” place, situate about 2 miles east from the dairy and about 1& miles south and east of Sumpter Depot, and through which defendant’s main line going “from Sumpter to Baker City passes, but sometimes the cows were turned out to feed upon the commons. That defendant’s track is unfenced from Sumpter Station to the Jett place. On the morn
5. The theory of the defense is, that Allen was driving the stock homeward when they first went upon defendant’s track, and that he was attempting to drive them along this trail on the right of way because by that route it was one quarter of a mile nearer to the dairy than by the county road. But he positively denies both of these assertions, and swears that he never at any time drove them through there; that when he first saw the cows upon the right of way he immediately went to them and began rounding them up and getting them off the right of way into the county road, taking those first that were nearest to him, preparatory to driving them home; that he had been engaged in that matter no more than 10 minutes when the cows were killed. To support its theory, however, defendant on cross-examination of plaintiff, offered in evidence, as containing admissions against his interest, what purports to be an owner’s statement of stock injured or killed, with plaintiff’s name as claimant typewritten at the bottom thereof, under which is written “per G. E. Allen.” This statement is upon a printed blank form furnished by the company, and is in the form of questions and answers. It contains a statement of the time and place of the accident, a description and the value of the cows injured and killed, and, besides'others, these questions and
6. On the face of it, without explanation, the statement is that at the time of the accident the stock was in charge of Allen and were being driven home by him, not that they were in his charge when they went upon the track. When, however, the statements are placed with the explanatory facts as disclosed by the evidence of Allen, it can at least be said that different deductions may honestly and reasonably be drawn therefrom by different minds, and under such circumstances the question is one proper to be submitted to a jury: Hedin v. Suburban Ry. Co. 26 Or. 155 (37 Pac. 540).
7. It is also contended by defendants that Allen was negligent in not going first to those cows that were on the main track and removing them; for, it is-argued, they were in the most danger, and his duty was to attend to them first. It may be conceded that it is the law that one who sees his cattle in danger upon a railroad track and can by reasonable exertions get them off, he is bound to do so (Milburn v. Kansas City, etc., Co. 86 Mo. 104), or that one having stock under his immediate care, custody and control, who voluntarily drives or puts them in a place of danger, or carelessly permits them to wander from his control into a place of danger, is guilty of contributory neg
8. As a matter of law, then, the court cannot say that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in turning his stock out to graze on uninclosed lands near defendant’s track or depot. That is a question for the jury: Wilmot v. Oregon R. Co. 48 Or. 494 (87 Pac. 528: 7 L. R. A. (N. S.), 202). Nor if plaintiff’s testimony is to be believed, can negligence be imputed to him because his stock was found upon defendant’s track. They were not in his immediate care, custody or control when they went upon the track, nor in the care of his servant, nor did either of them carelessly permit them to wander from his control into the place of danger where they were found.
9. If counsel by argument can draw a different inference from the evidence, it is derived only by the process of weighing testimony and by giving credence to one piece of testimony and rejecting another where there is a conflict. But when the right determination of a case depends upon the weight to be given evidence, it is for the consideration of the jury: Anderson v. North Pacific Lumber Co. 21 Or. 281 (28 Pac. 5). It is undisputed, however, that the servant about 10 minutes before the accident found plaintiff’s stock in a place which imparted notice of danger, not notice of a present and imminent danger by seeing a train approaching, for that is not the fact, but because the track itself is a warning of possible danger: Dur
10. When both the duty and the extent of its performance are to be ascertained as facts, a jury alone can determine what is negligence and whether it has been proven: West Phila. Pass. Ry. Co. v. Gallagher, 108 Pa. St. 524; Robinson v. Cone. 22 Vt. 213 (54 Am. Dec. 67). The court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for a nonsuit.
11. The court refused to instruct the jury upon defendant’s request to return a verdict in its favor, and this action of the court is assigned as error. This request was based upon no other contention than that made to support the motion for nonsuit, and that has been considered and disposed of adversely to de
Plaintiff’s evidence shows that there are about l-J- miles of unfenced track from Sumpter toward Baker City; that it is three fourths of a mile from Sumpter to the head of a switch for a siding running back towards Sumpter about 200 feet, which is used for storing slab wood for the use of defendant’s engines; that further on in the direction of Baker City, about 150 yards from this switch, the branch line to Austin .leaves the main line and forms the head or point of the “Y.” The cows were killed near the switch for the “Sumpter Siding,” and on the side thereof toward Baker City. There is no suggestion in plaintiff’s evidence that Sumpter Siding was a part of or was used in connection with the depot at Sumpter.
12. The defendant’s evidence is not found in the bill of exceptions; but there is on file a separate transcript of what appears to be some evidence taken in this case, and includes what purports to be some, at least, of defendant’s testimony, but it is not identified in any manner by the court, or certified to be any or all of the testimony in this case, and for that reason it cannot be legally considered. However, as the parties have printed in their briefs some excerpts therefrom, we have not refrained from looking into it? It shows, in substance, that switching is done daily at the “Y” in reversing engines and
“A very 'clearly defined principle regulates this question— the principle of paramount public importance of the public good or convenience over private rights. Fence laws have been passed very generally in all parts of the country, compelling railroad companies to fence their tracks in order to protect individuals from injuries to their stock straying thereon. But at stations where the general public has a right of access, and the necessary' transactions of the road require it, an exception either by express language in the statute or by construction of the courts has come to be made in almost every instance to the general obligation to fence, on the ground that the public right of access overrules the private right of protection. The question. then, of how far this exception to the obligation to fence extends, or, in other words, hoAv far or Avhat are station or depot grounds, is decided by determining Iioav far the public convenience requires an open track.”
There is no public convenience to be conserved at a place used exclusively for switching. The public has no right of access where no passengers get on or off the train or no freight is loaded and unloaded. There is a suggestion in the evidence, however, that sometimes freight billed to Sumpter is put off at this “Y” as an accommodation. But that fact cannot, as a matter of law, be said to be sufficient to create a general public right of access to defendant’s tracks at that point, so as to excuse it from the duty of fencing. We are of the opinion, therefore. that the court could not, as a matter of law, declare the place where plaintiff’s cows were killed to be a necessary part
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.