4 Wash. 38 | Wash. | 1892
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant sued the respondent for damages for injuries caused by the negligence of the railroad company. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, the court granted a motion for a non-suit on the ground that his evidence showed thathe was negligent, and that his negligence contributed to the injury. The plaintiff was a youth twenty-one years of age, and at the time he was injured was driving a team and wagon on a street in the city of Seattle, and was injured by a collision at the public crossing with the train of defendant on the afternoon of August 8,1890. The street was a much traveled public highway. The railroad runs north and south, and the street running northwest and southeast crosses it at a sharp angle. The train and plaintiff were going in the same general northerly direction towards the city. There was testimony to show that the plaintiff, at the close of his day’s work, between
This question was twice before the supreme court of the Territory in the case of N. P. R. R. Co. v. Holmes, 3 Wash. T. 202 (14 Pac. Rep. 688), and 3 Wash. T. 543 (18 Pac. Rep. 76). When first before the court it was held that it was the duty of the party injured to have stopped. A petition for a rehearing was granted and later, there having been a change of the members of the court mean- ■ while, the question was decided otherwise under the facts of that case; There were dissenting opinions upon both hearings. But in the opinion last rendered the court says, “that it may or may not be a party's duty to stop, look and listen, is dependent on the status of each case.” It was conceded that there might be cases where it would be a party’s duty to stop and listen, and I am well satisfied that such should be the rule under some circumstances.
As to this particular case there was testimony to show that, extending from the top of this incline, which was sixty-five feet distant from the track, was a strip of several hundred feet in length where the road was nearly level, and there was a conflict in the testimony as to how far a train could have been seen from this level street, coming from the south, some of the witnesses placing the distance at a mile or so, others at a few hundred feet, and som© saying it could he seen only a little ways. It seems the plaintiff did not look to the south while passing along this strip, nor until he started down the incline, and here again the testimony was conflicting as to how far a train could be seen coming from the south. There is some confusion also, because some of the witnesses spoke of the distance the track could be seen before the view was shut off by shrubbery, etc., the train being higher than the track could
While the testimony is uncertain and contradictory in some important particulars, yet as it appears it is a close question whether the plaintiff can escape the charge of contributory negligence. If he could have seen along the track for a long distance while on the level place before going down the incline he certainly knew it and should have looked, especially as he could not see an approaching train from the southward for any great distanee from the crossing while going down the incline, and he must have
Other witnesses who were in the vicinity at the time also testified that they could not hear the train until it Whistled, and that a train could not be heard for any considerable distance at that place unless the whistle was blown or bell rung, although why such was the case was not shown. What it was that prevented the rumbling of this train from being heard does not appear upon either the director cross-examination of the witnesses, and why the noise which it must have made could not have been heard while the train-was yet a sufficient distance from the crossing to have given a timely warning is to us inexplicable, unless it was due to the fact that this was a planked street, or more properly a bridge, for some distance at this crossing, and that a good many teams were passing over it constantly. Whatever the noise was that prevented the hearing, if it was temporary only, the plaintiff should have stopped and waited a reasonable time for it to subside, if the situation was such that he could not and had not been able to see effectually. But this noise may have been practically continual and of sufficient volume to prevent persons at that point from hearing a train unless the bell was rung or the whistle blown, and there is testimony to the effect that had the proper and customary signals been given, the same
The questions going to the plaintiff’s negligence are so inseparably woven with the facts upon which the testimony was conflicting that the case should have gone to the jury. Without undertaking to comment on the many authorities relating to the granting of non-suits, it is sufficient to say that the rule as laid down in Schofield v. Chicago, etc., Railway Co., 114 U. S. 618, is a good one. Mr. Justice
Anders, C. J. — I am of the opinion that the testimony of the plaintiff, appearing in the record, if true, shows such 'a state of facts as would not justify the court in holding, as a conclusion of law, that he was guilty of such negligence as would preclude him from recovering in this action. And whether the testimony was true or not was a question for the determination of the jury. I therefore concur in the foregoing opinion of Judge Scott, that the motion for a non-suit should not have been granted, and that the judgment should be reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). — With all due deference for the result deduced by my brethren from the facts of this case, and to the argument in the course of which they reach it, I am constrained to say that in my judgment the logical result of the argument as well as the facts should be an affirmance of the judgment of the superior court sustaining the motion for a non-suit rather than a reversal. It is clear from the evidence that the appellant was grossly in fault. He drove his team at a pace not exceeding two
Further than that, it is apparent that if appellant, when within the line of obstructions caused by the poles, and as near as ten or fifteen feet from the railroad track, had then looked to the southward, when the train was within three hundred feet of him, he might have easily turned his entirely manageable team to the right and have thus escaped. It is perfectly clear that he sat still with his face to the north and the east all the time and entirely omitted to take any care for his own safety until the train was actually upon him. It is against the policy which assumes to have some regard for the public who travel, and are employed upon railroad trains, as well as for those who cross their tracks, that every man should use reasonable diligence in protecting himself from injury as well as avoiding possible loss of life and property by a collision with him, and the superior court is to be commended in having stopped the case when it did, thus avoiding what, even in the event of another trial, must be useless waste of time and money by both parties. That certain witnesses made statements, which, taken entirely alone, constituted a scintilla of evidence for the plaintiff, should not outweigh the burden of the case as a whole.
Hoyt, J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result, because from the testimony I am not satisfied that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.