— This appeal is from a judgment recovered by appellee against appellant for causing the death of appellee’s infant son by the alleged negligence of appellant’s employes in switching cars. The errors relied on for reversal are, (1) that the court erred in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the complaint, (2) that it erred in overruling its motion for judgment in appellant’s favor on answers to special interrogatories notwithstanding the general verdict in appellee’s favor, and (3) that it erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.
So far as material to the one objection urged by appellant to the complaint the facts averred in it show that at the time of the injury and death of appellee’s son, appellant’s railroad ran through the city of Portland and intersected a city street known as Bridge Street which ran north and south; that to the west of Bridge Street was located a cold storage and poultry packing plant along the east side of which, and between the plant and Bridge Street, appellant had constructed a switch or spur track from its tracks which were to the north of the poultry plant; that the entrance to the poultry plant was from Bridge Street westward across the switch over which a crossing about twenty feet wide had been constructed of heavy plank for the use of vehicles and persons on foot going back and forth between Bridge Street and the poultry plant; that said entrance and crossing were in сonstant daily use by many people and were the only way to reach the plant, all of which was well known to appellant and its employes; that on the day appellee’s son, then two years and two months old, was injured, the child was at the home of his maternal grandfather who had in his employ a youth fifteen years old; that the grandfather sent this youth to the poultry house abоut a block from the grandfather’s store for a chicken and some eggs and when he went on this errand
The cases cited and apparently relied on by counsel to Sustain them on this point are wholly without strength to do so. The first one, that of Jordan v. Grand Rapids, etc., R. Co. (1904),
In Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Simons, supra, the railroad company built a wire fence along the right of way of its tracks in Gas City. Its tracks ran parallel with streets of the town on both sides of them but where the fence was built there were no connecting streets for some distance. A number of paths had been defined in this distance by people on foot crossing the tracks. When the fence was built by the railroad company it left an opening in it between two posts at one of these рaths and this path and the opening a considerable part of the public had used as a way over the tracks. It was held that an invitation to use such might be implied.
The case falls easily into the rules declared and it is manifest that appellant owed a duty of exercising active vigilance to the extent of reasonable care not to injure appellee’s infant son.
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