130 P. 470 | Utah | 1913
This is an action to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been occasioned through the negligence of the defendant. The injury occurred in Bingham Canyon. There the defendant operated two lines of railroad, one along the bed of the canyon for the transportation of passengers and freight, called the low line; the other, called the high line, along the side of the canyon for the transportation of freight, mostly ore, from mines up the canyon to a place below, called Welby, a distance of about fourteen miles. The grade is very steep. Special ore cars of steel and hopper bottom, about thirty-six feet long, were used for this purpose. About twenty-eight •cars were generally operated in a train from Welby to the mine. The crew of each was composed of an engineer and a fireman on the engine, a head brakeman on the pilot, and a conductor and a brakeman in the caboose at the rear. The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was nine years old. He lived in the canyon with his parents. The record recites that the plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that, at and for a long time prior to the day in question, boys of various ages, and adults, almost daily jumped on the defendant’s trains and cars on the low line and the connecting track near the depot in the canyon, particularly during switching operations, and rode for shorter or longer distances, sometimes hanging on the sides of the cars, something riding on top, and sometimes on the footboard of the engine; so, too, on the high line, men and boys of various ages frequently boarded the defendant’s trains, going to and coming from the mines, and rode for longer or shorter distances; and that all this was done in plain sight of the train crews, for the most part on trains not intended for passengers, without molestation or objection or any effort on their part to put them off, and without demanding or collecting fare. On two occasions a. brakeman had invited two or three boys to ride in the caboose Avith him on the high line for a bunch of wild flowers which they had picked. The record further recites that there was no direct evidence that any officer or agent of the company, other than train operatives such as conductors, brakemen,
On the day of the accident, the plaintiff and five other boys, from eight to thirteen years of age, about two o’clock in the afternoon, started from near the depot in the canyon carrying two guns, intending to shoot squirrels and birds. They climbed the side of the mountain until they reached the high line. They then walked down that track shooting at squirrels and birds, and roamed about the country in the vicinity of the railroad. They kept on in this way till they came to a point on the high line called Midas, a passing track. There, at about four o’clock, they saw, about half a mile away, an ore train coming up the canyon from Welby to the mines. It consisted of an engine, twenty-eight empty ore cars, and a caboose at the rear. The engine was a Mallet engine, with a double set of driving wheels. Its tender was nearly as long as an ore car. The crew consisted of an engineer and fireman on the engine, a head brakeman on the pilot, and a conductor and rear brakeman in the caboose. When the boys saw the train coming, according to the testimony of some of them, one said, “Here comes the train. Let’s catch it. We’ll get home quicker.” According to others, one of them said, “Here comes a train. Let’s ask the engineer for a ride” — to which the others replied, “All right, that’s a go.”’ Ammon Lawhorn, the plaintiff’s brother, and Albert Eay, the-two oldest boys, each about thirteen years of age, then left the other four and walked farther down the track towards the train. It soon came along, going from six to nine miles an hour. The two boys were on the engineer’s side of the track. The engineer was in the cab, the fireman shoveling coal, the-head brakeman on the pilot of the engine, and the conductor and rear brakeman in the caboose. One of the boys hallooed to the engineer, as he came opposite them, “Give us a ride.” The engineer replied, “All right, there are plenty of ears in the train,” and pointed to the rear. They boarded the-
Tbe record further .recites that evidence was introduced by tbe plaintiff tending to show that shortly after tbe engineer passed tbe four boys, and just as tbe plaintiff attempted to
The case was tried to the court and a jury. A verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant appeals.
The assignments of error relate to the charge. The substance of four or five paragraphs of it, relating to plaintiff’s evidence and theory of the case, is: If the juiy found that the plaintiff, by reason of his age and want of intelligence, was not capable of appreciating the danger of getting on cars in motion and riding thereon; that men of ordinary prudence and intelligence, situated as were the train operatives, would have appreciated the dangerous situation of a child, such as plaintiff, in attempting to board or ride on cars in motion; that the train operatives saw him along the track and had reason to believe that he intended to, and probably would, mount the cars in motion, or would attempt to do so; that railroad men of ordinary prudence would have appreciated that such an act, on the part of such a child, was, under the circumstances, accompanied with danger to life or limb, and would probably result in injury; and that it appeared to them, or to a person of ordinary prudence, that the plaintiff, by reason of his age and want of intelligence, was not capable of appreciating the danger — then a duty was owing from the train operatives to exercise ordinary care to refrain from conduct that would probably result in injury to him, and to take such affirmative precaution, if any, with a view of keeping him from being injured, as appeared necessary to railroad men of ordinary prudence and experience in the business, and to exercise ordinary care to prevent him from getting or riding on the cars. The court further charged that if, under the facts and circumstances enumerated, the engineer consented, or indicated consent, to the plaintiff to get on the train in motion, that a person of ordinary prudence, under the existing circumstances, would not have given, or indicated such consent to a youth of apparent immaturity and tender years, and apparently lacking in strength and experience to attempt with safety to mount and ride on the cars, and that the plaintiff, by reason of such consent or indication, got upon
The court refused to so charge on tbe whole case, but, in effect, did so on tbe defendant’s evidence and theory. Tbe charge in such respect is:
1 “You are instructed if the plaintiff attempted to get on tbe train at tbe time of bis injury without any permission from any of tbe employees of tbe defendant company, and was not induced to board tbe train in question because of any custom or habit on tbe part of children to ride defendant’s trains without objection on the part of defendant’s employees, then you are instructed that tbe plaintiff was a trespasser in attempting to board tbe train at tbe time of bis injury and tbe only duty which tbe railroad company and its employees owed to him was to refrain from wilfully or wantonly injuring him, or if be was 'actually seen in a position of peril, then to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring him. If you should find that tbe plaintiff fell from tbe car because of any jerk or jar or vibration, due wholly to tbe ordinary movement of tbe wheels along tbe rails or to tbe fact that tbe car be was attempting to ride was rounding a curve, you have no right to return a verdict against tbe defendant on tbe theory that tbe engineer wantonly or recklessly or with gross negligence jerked tbe train with bis engine, unless tbe engineer knew tbe plaintiff to be in a position of*252 peril, and the engineer could have avoided the jerk or jar by the use of ordinary care.”
. The complaint made is that the court, even on plaintiff’s theory and evidence, erred in stating that a duty was imposed on the train operatives to use ordinary care to avoid injuring' the plaintiff or to prevent him getting on the cars. It is urged that the charge in such respect, was without the issues and is against law. In support of this, it is said that in the complaint it is not alleged that a duty was imposed on the defendant to prevent children or the plaintiff from boarding cars, or that the train operatives failed in such particular, or were guilty of such a specific omission of duty. There are no such direct allegations in the complaint. But such direct averments were not essential. The question is, Were there sufficient facts alleged upon which a legal duty arose to use care in such particular and to show a breach thereof? We think there were. It is alleged that the defendant was in the habit of permitting persons, especially children, to ride on its freight trains, without warning them of the danger; that it was dangerous, under the circumstances, for children to board moving cars, but that the defendant habitually permitted and invited them to do so without warning them of the danger; that, on the day in question, the engineer and other members of the train crew knowingly invited and permitted the plaintiff, an infant nine years of age, to board the train without warning him of the danger, and, upon observing that he was about to board the train, wantonly and negligently jerked it, throwing him to the ground; that the defendant knowingly and negligently suffered and permitted the plaintiff and other children to board and ride upon its freight trains, and knowingly and negligently failed and omitted to make objections thereto; and that the plaintiff, without warning of the danger, was., by reason of such custom and habit, permission, imitation, and consent induced to mount the train, and was injured. We think these allegations are sufficient to justify the charge. We are also of the opinion that, upon the evidence on behalf of the plaintiff, a legal duty arose on the part of the train operatives to use care.
The judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed, with costs. Such is the order.