85 Me. 34 | Me. | 1892
This is an action to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff through the alleged negligence of the defendant corporation, in the construction and maintenance of a culvert upon the line of its road at Crowell’s Brook, between North Belgrade and Oakland. Negligence is also alleged on the part of the defendant in the inspection of its road and roadbed in that vicinity ; and that in consequence of the negligence and carelessness of the defendant, on the tenth day of June, 1889, the culvert at the place named together with a portion of the defendant’s road-bed was washed out, thereby causing a deep cut, ditch or wash-out in the road-bed into which the defendant’s train, upon which the plaintiff in the discharge of his duty as postal clerk, was thrown, and in consequence thereof the plaintiff received severe injuries.
A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff for the sum of $9558, which the defendant moves to set aside.
To understand more accurately the legal position of the parties to this suit, the following summary of facts is gleaned from the evidence.
On the. day in question, the defendant’s regular passenger and
Soon after the train left Portland it began to rain, and showers were frequent from Portland to North Belgrade, and when the train reached the latter place the rain had nearly ceased.
Between North Belgrade and Oakland the track runs along the border of Snow pond, from which the land rises gradually to the northwest for a distance of about one mile, forming a water-shed of nearly four miles in length on the pond and extending back on an average for about one mile. The land is mostly tillage and pasture. In this space of four miles between North Belgrade and Oakland, there are. five natural brooks draining this territory and emptying into Snow pond. Over these brooks the Androscoggin and Kennebec Railroad company built culverts when it constructed its road in 1849. These five culverts have stood from the time they were constructed to the present time, except the one at Crowell’s brook, which, on the day this accident occurred, was washed out and sixty feet of the road-bed carried away, by an'unprecedented rainfall in that immediate locality. The evidence shows that there appeared to be a conjunction of clouds going in opposite directions, emptying volumes of water upon this brook, causing it to overflow its banks, the quantity of water being greater than could have been discharged through three culverts of the size of this one, which had vented the water of this brook for more than forty years. The .water thus restrained formed a pond from ten to fourteen feet in depth, and instantly washed out the embankment and culvert,, tearing down more or less of the wall and removing some of the covering stones. This occurred but a short time before the regular train was due, and there was no notice of the wash-out by any employee of the railroad or any -other person. The section men were at work within twenty rods of the culvert at the time the shower commenced, and returned to the car house near the station at Oakland, where
No serious controversy arises in reference to the general principles of law by which the liability of the railroad company is to be tested.
It is not denied that the defendant company owed the same degree of care to this plaintiff while riding in the postal car in charge of mails that it did to passengers upon the train. Blair v. Erie Railway Co. 66 N. Y. 313; Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. v. State, 72 Md. 36.
A carrier of passengers, however, is not, like a common carrier of goods, an insurer against everything but the act of God and public enemies. The law requires common carriers of passengers to do all that human care, vigilance and foresight can under the circumstances, considering the character and mode of conveyance, to prevent accident to passengers. To require anything less would be to leave the lives of persons in the hands of the reckless, and unprotected against the negligent and incautious. Tuller v. Talbot, 23 Ill. 357; Ingalls v. Bills, 9 Met. 1, 15; Bowen v. New York Central Railroad Co. 18 N. Y. 408, 410. But while public policy and safety require of common carriers of passengers that they be held to the utmost care which is consistent with the business in which they are engaged,-they are not to be held as against every possible danger, nor are they to be held accountable for not taking every possible precaution against danger and accident. If they were required to do that, it would be to hold them insurers to the same extent as carriers of goods, and compel them to adopt a course of conduct inconsistent with the economy and speed which are essential to the dispatch of their business in serving the public. Simmons v. New Bedford and Nantucket Steam Boat Co. 97 Mass. 361, 367; Pittsburg, Cinn. & St. Louis R. R. Co. v. Thompson, 56 Ill. 138; Warren v. Fitchburg Rail
Great care is required from railroad companies in the construction of their roads, but absolute liability for defects has never been charged upon them. Not only must the road be properly constructed, but it must be kept in good condition. In this respect, as well as all others, they are bound to provide against dangers which can reasonably be foreseen. Accidents may happen, notwithstanding the utmost care and diligence are exercised to prevent them. They are bound to exercise that degree of care and skill which cautious persons would use, in the construction, by competent engineers and workmen, of the roadbed, track, culverts and all the appliances and means of transportation to carry on the business of the road and operate its trains ; to make frequent, careful examinations and inspections of the same, in order to avoid accidents as far as human skill and foresight can reasonably secure such a result. Bowen v. New York Central Railroad Co. supra; International & Great Northern R. R. Co. v. Halloren, 53 Texas, 343. And in the construction of their track, road-bed, and culverts they should be required so to construct them as to avoid such dangers as could be reasonably foreseen or ascertained by competent and skilful engineers, as liable to result from rain-falls and freshets incident to that particular section of country through which they are constructed. Dangers which might reasonably be expected to occur from these sources, though rarely, should be guarded against. Great Western Railway Co. v. Fawcett, 1 Moore, P. C. (N. S.) 101. Thus, in the last cited case, which was appealed from the province of Canada, and heard before the judicial committee of the Privy Council, it was held that a railway company, in the formation of its line, is bound to construct
But a company would not be guilty of such culpable negligence as to make it liable in damages, if it failed to provide against such extraordinary and unprecedented storms, floods or other inevitable casualties caused by the hidden forces of nature, unknown to common experience, and which could not have been reasonably anticipated by that degree of engineering skill and experience required in the prudent construction of such railroad. In such case the injury cannot be held to be attributable to any fault or negligence of the company; it results from inevitable accident — vis major — the act of God.
This is now too firmly established by the highest courts in this country and in England to require any extended citation of authorities.
It was in accordance with this principle that in the English court of Exchequer, Withers v. North Kent Railway Co. 3 Hurlst. & N. 969, was decided.
In that case, it was shown that the railroad was laid on an embankment built of sandy soil, in a marshy country subject to floods, and that the culverts were insufficient at times to carry off the water. But it did not appear that the embankment had ever been affected by floods, although it had been in use for five years, until the night upon which the plaintiff was traveling, in which an extraordinary flood had carried away the soil from under the track, and the cars were thrown off. It was held that this was no evidence of negligence, and that the verdict was unwarranted. " It is contended on the part of the plaintiff, ” says Bramwell, B., "that the company’s servants were bound to know the consequences which were likely to follow from the flood. That is
We have already stated some of the important facts in this case bearing upon the defendent’s liability. The rain-fall was not only extraordinary, but unprecedented. It came suddenly and the shower lasted about two hours. Nothing like it, as the testimony shows, had occurred for more than fifty years. It was much more severe at this particular locality, than at the stations of North Belgrade or Oakland, only two miles distant from it.
The culvert, built at the time the road was constructed in
The test of liability is not whether the company used such particular foresight as is evident, after the accident happened, might have averted it, had the danger been known, but whether it used that degree of care and prudence which very cautious and prudent persons would have used under apparent circumstances of the case to pi’event the accident, without reasonable knowledge that it was likely to occur. Bowen v. New York Central Railroad Co. 18 N. Y. 408. "In such a case,” says Bramwell, B., in Cornman v. Eastern Counties Railway Co. 4 Hurlst. & N. 781, 786, "it is always a question whether the mischief could have been reasonably foreseen. Nothing is so easy as to be wise after the event.”
When we come to consider the question whether there was proper inspection of the road-bed and culvert at that point before the accident, we enter upon more debatable ground. There were five section men who had started out at one o’clock and were at work surfacing and lining up the track within twenty or
In order that a railway company may be assured that its line is in a reasonably safe condition, the duty devolves upon it of causing as frequent inspection of its road-bed and track as can be done consistently with the conduct of its business. A neglect of such duty renders the company liable to any one injured by reason of any defect which might have been discovered by such inspection. Moreover, under circumstances of more than ordinary peril, as in case of violent storms, the company should inspect its lines with more than ordinary promptitude, particularly those portions which are the most liable to injury by storm or flood. The greater the peril, the greater the vigilance demanded. ' The authorities certainly go to this extent. Some impose a more stringent rule, holding that inspection should be made both during and after extraordinary storms in order to prevent accidents. International & Great Northern R. Co. v. Halloren, 53 Texas, 343 ; Hardy v. North Carolina Central R. Co. 74 N. C. 734.
Whether there was such promptitude of inspection, by those whose duty it was to make it, as the exigencies of the occasion demanded, is a question upon which the court is not unanimous in its opinion.
It is asserted on the part of the defendant company that there was nothing either in the nature or severity of the shower at Oakland where the section men were, to attract their attention. They certainly knew it was a severe shower, — the hardest, the foreman says, he ever knew, — so hard he thought it necessary
The case is one not absolutely free from doubt in some of its bearings. The damages are large. Yet, after a very careful examination of the evidence, a majority of the court are of the opinion that the verdict may stand if the plaintiff will remit all above six thousand dollars within thirty days after decision announced ; otherwise a new trial is to be granted.
Judgment accordingly.
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