35 Wash. 55 | Wash. | 1904
This is an action whereby the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for injuries received from falling through a bridge on the line of defendant’s railroad. The substantial allegations of the complaint are, that on the 16th day of November, 1902, between the hours of
It is assigned that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint, and in entering judgment of dismissal. It is appellant’s theory that his complaint does not show that he was a trespasser, but that, by reason of the averment that respondent had for a long time permitted the use of its track and bridge by pedestrians and had consented thereto, he became a licensee. Upon the theory that his averments, as against demurrer, established the fact that he was a licensee, he urges that respondent owed him the duty of ordinary diligence and care to avoid injury. Appellant cites a number of cases, which he insists sustain the theory of respondent’s liability here. Among the cases cited by him are the following: Cahill v. Chicago etc. R. Co., 74 Fed. 285; Hooker v. Chicago etc. R. Co., 76 Wis. 542, 44 N. W. 1085; Hansen v.
Each of the above cases involved the liability of a railroad company for injuries resulting from the movement of a train which ran over a person upon the railway track. In each case the location of the injured person with reference to the train, together with the topography and en-
The distinction between the relations of a trespasser and a licensee to the railroad company seems to be as follows : In the ease of the former, the company when moving trains is under no obligation to keep a special lookout for him, but if he is discovered upon the track in time to avoid injury by the exercise of reasonable care after such discovery, common humanity demands that such care shall be used. In the case of the licensee, the company when moving trains is charged with the additional duty of being in a state of expectancy as to the probable presence of persons upon the track at places where travel thereon is known to be customary and frequent. The care required in the case of the licensee, therefore, calls for both reasonable lookout in advance and a reasonable effort to avoid injury after
Assuming, however, that appellant was a licensee by reason of the fact that respondent had never actually prohibited him and others from traveling there, what new obligation did that fact create on the part of respondent, under the peculiar facts of this case? If he was a licensee, then, it is true, respondent, as we have already seen, was under obligation to be on the lookout, and not negligently run him down with a train. But was it required to have regard to his convenience, rather than its own, in the repair of its track and bridge? Respondent had never assumed to keep in repair a highway for footmen. Appellant was certainly not a licensee in the sense of being invited to cross the bridge. For his own benefit only, he assumed to cross because the privilege had not been denied. Under such circumstances, we think he must be held to have taken the situation as he found it. Cusick v. Adams, 115 N. Y. 55, 21 N. E. 673, 12 Am. St. 772; Schreiner v. Great Northern R. Co., 86 Minn. 245, 90 N. W. 400, 58 L. R. A. 75; Reardon v. Thompson,
“But the general rule is that a licensee goes upon land at his own risk and must take the premises as he finds them. An 'open hole, which is not concealed otherwise than by the darkness of night, is a danger which a licensee must avoid at his peril;”
citing many cases. The exception to the rule, as above stated, is noted in the following quoted extract from Pollock on Torts, at pages 503, 504 (6th ed.) :
“Persons who by the mere gratuitous permission of owners or occupiers take a short cut across a waste piece of land, or pass over private bridges or have the run of a building, cannot expect to find the land free from holes or ditches, or the bridges to be in safe repair, or the passages and stairs to be commodious and free from dangerous places. If the occupier, while the permission continues, does something that creates a concealed danger to people availing themselves of • it, he may well be liable. And he would of course be liable, not for failure in a special duty, but for wilful wrong, if he purposely made his property dangerous to persons using ordinary care, and then held out his permission as an inducement to come on it. Apart from this improbable case, the ■ licensee’s rights are measured, at best, by the actual state of the property at the time of the license.”
This case cannot, in any reasonable view, be said to come within the exception. To leave an open space thirty inches wide between the ties of a railroad bridge does not create a concealed danger. Any person with the sense of sight can easily see such space, under ordinary andj usual conditions, and can also easily step' across it. It is not charged that the hole was left with any wilful purpose to make the property dangerous. We therefore think
Other cases cited by appellant, not hereinbefore mentioned, we believe do not assist in the determination of this case. We will briefly review those cases. In Davis v. Chicago etc. R. Co., 58 Wis. 646, 17 N. W. 406, 46 Am. Rep. 667, it was held, in the case of a licensee upon a railway track, that it was for the jury to determine whether it was negligence to leave a steam boiler and engine upon its track unattended, and whether the explosion which caused the plaintiff’s injury was the result of such lack of attention. The act of leaving such a dangerous agency as an unattended and heated boiler and engine may well have been for the jury, on the principle that it may have been wanton neglect. The same was true in Harriman v. Pittsburg etc. R. Co., 45 Ohio St. 11, 12 N. E. 451, 4 Am. St. 507, where a torpedo had been left in an exposed condition near the track and was picked up by a child of tender years, who was injured. In Lillstrom v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 53 Minn. 464, 55 N. W. 624, 20 L. R. A. 587, the defendant had, for a long time, itself maintained for the public a crossing of its track at the place of injury. Planks were torn away from the crossing, and it was claimed that the injured one’s sleigh caught in the defective crossing. The case was properly for the jury on the theory that, as the company had assumed to maintain the crossing for the public, it was its duty to keep it in repair. In Tobin v. Portland etc. R. Co., 59 Me. 183, 8 Am. Rep. 415, the railroad company left
We believe that the demurrer was properly sustained, not alone upon the ground of want of negligence on the part of respondent, but also upon the ground of contributory negligence. We think the complaint discloses, upon its face, such facts as must be held, as matter of law, to amount to contributory negligence. The conditions were certainly unusual. Under the darkness of night appellant was walking upon a mountain railroad. The place was in a
The judgment is affirmed.
Fullerton, C. J., and Dunbar, Mount, and Anders, JJ., concur.