55 P.2d 148 | Idaho | 1936
Respondent's automobile, in which he was driving across appellant's main line tracks at Heyburn, was struck by the engine of a freight train, practically demolishing the car, throwing respondent out of it, and severely injuring him, for which he recovered damages in this action.
For the purposes of this discussion we may consider that appellant's tracks run east and west at the place of the accident. The road upon which respondent approached the track led from the north and west, and approximately 40 feet north of the track after dipping down through a slight depression turned to the south and crossed the track at right angles. Five hundred and seventy-six feet west of the crossing is appellant's Heyburn depot. Between the crossing and the depot and on the north side of the track parallel thereto there is an embankment of dirt somewhat overgrown with weeds, with its highest elevation about four and one-half feet, 300 feet east of the depot, which would be 276 feet west of the crossing.
Respondent testified he stopped his car north of the track at about where the crossing warning sign is located, which he estimated to be about six paces or 18 feet from the track, that he looked to the left and right and saw no train, that his vision was obscured to the right by the dirt embankment referred to above and the depot, and that he heard no whistle or bell (parenthetically one of the grounds of alleged negligence was that no whistle was blown or bell rung; evidence was given both ways, but by the jury's verdict we must approach the problem with the premise that no whistle was blown or bell rung). Respondent then put his automobile in low gear and after his automobile had rolled back about six feet started across the tracks at about one mile per hour, at which speed he would progress about one and a half feet per second. While respondent's testimony is slightly contradictory and conflicting, a fair inference is that he meant to state that lie continued to look both ways and saw nothing until he was on the track, when he saw the engine approaching rapidly on his right, and so close that he could not back *396 up and avoid it, and therefore gave his car "the gas" and attempted to rush across out of the way, that the right rear portion of his automobile was struck by the engine, and that he knew no more for some time thereafter.
Appellant takes the position that if respondent's vision was obscured by the embankment and the depot or either the embankment or depot at the point he stopped, he should have looked when in a place of safety and when his vision was not obscured, and that either he did not look from such vantage point, because if he did he would have seen the oncoming train, or that if he did so look he did not see it, but is charged with knowledge of what he could and should have seen.
Lundy, the front brakeman on the train, testified he was riding in the cab of the engine on the left-hand side and that when the engine was 300 or 350 feet west of the crossing he saw respondent about 200 feet north of the crossing approaching at a speed of 15 miles per hour, and that respondent did not stop, that when he saw respondent was apparently going to attempt to cross in front of the train the brakeman called to the engineer to stop the train, the engine then being 50 or 60 feet west of the crossing.
Instruction number 10, the giving of which is assigned as error, was as follows:
"You are instructed, gentlemen of the jury, that one who has the last clear chance or opportunity of avoiding an accident, notwithstanding the negligence of the other party, is considered in law to have been solely responsible for the accident, altho the actions of the person injured may have been the primary cause of the injury, yet an action for such injury may be maintained when it appears that by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, the defendant might have avoided the consequences of the injured party's negligence. In this case, if you were to find that the agents and employees of the defendant had a last clear chance to and could have stopped the train and avoided the accident, then you are instructed as a matter of law, that the plaintiff could recover such sums as would compensate him for the damage he has sustained by reason of the accident, not, however, exceeding the amount as prayed for in his complaint."
This court has thus stated the doctrine of last clear chance: *397
". . . . If the one party (here appellant) knows of the peril of the other, (respondent) although brought about by that other's (respondent) negligence, in time to avoid injuring him, he is at once put to a degree of care commensurate with the present situation of the parties." (Short v. Boise ValleyTraction Co.,
Analyzing the statement gives this initial requirement for application of the doctrine: that appellant must have perceived respondent's peril at a time when respondent could not have saved himself and in time for appellant to have avoided the accident. Here appellant did not perceive respondent's peril and respondent was in no peril until respondent was upon or so close to the track that he could not stop, which, beyond any dispute, was at a time when the train could not have been stopped before passing the crossing.
Trains are under no legal obligation to stop or slow up for a crossing when the operators thereof merely see an automobile approaching and there is still time and opportunity for the automobile to stop before being in a position of peril, and there is nothing to indicate that the driver of the automobile is not going to do so. (Burrow v. Idaho Wash. Northern B. R.,
"The fact that an instruction may be correct as a general principle of law is not material, because it was the duty of the trial court to confine itself to a statement of such principles of law as were applicable to the evidence admitted in support of the contentions of the parties, and thus to aid the jury in arriving at a correct determination of the issues involved, for, if an instruction is not thus based on the evidence, it is erroneous, in that it introduces before the jury issues not presented thereby, and is well calculated to mislead and induce them to suppose that a state of factsconstituting such issues existed, in the opinion of the court,under the evidence and might be considered by them. 14 Rawle C. L., sec. 51." (Italics herein ours.)
"And in determining the scope of its instructions the court must keep in mind the issues made by the pleadings in the case, and the evidence adduced in support thereof, and no instruction should be given which tenders an issue that is not supported by the pleadings and such evidence, or which deviates therefrom in any material respect. The theory upon which the rule is founded is that the giving of an instruction outside the issues made by the pleadings tends to mislead the jury into the belief that such an issue is before them and bring them to an improper verdict. (14 Rawle C. L., sec. 50.)"
Holt v. Spokane Palouse Ry. Co.,
It was shown without dispute that the front of the locomotive was 16 feet high. Respondent testified the floor of his automobile was 15 inches above the ground; there is no evidence as to how high above the floor of the car his *399
eyes were when seated in the car. Assuming that it was anywhere between 2 1/2 to 4 feet above the bottom of the car, his eyes, when he stopped 18 or 24 feet north of the track, would have been in the neighborhood of 5 feet from the ground or 4 feet above the level of the rail at the crossing, and there was testimony that the track was substantially level between the crossing and the depot. The highest point of the embankment between him and the depot above the level of the rail would have been 4.3 feet. If the engine had been at the depot at that time and not west of the depot, there would have been approximately one-half of the engine in the range of his vision. As stated, however, in Pokora v. Wabash Ry. Co.,
Appellant assigns as error the interrogation of appellant's engineer on cross-examination concerning an asserted statement made by him to the effect that when the brakeman called him to stop the train that in reaching from the whistle cord to the brake lever he caught his glove and if he had not done so he could have stopped the train, denied by the engineer. This statement was not, as to the instruction given and the evidence as to stopping the train, pertinent because whether he caught his glove or not, the evidence shows without dispute or any conflict that the train could not then have been stopped in time to have prevented or avoided the accident. On the issue as to whether anything else might have been done, short of stopping, to avoid the accident, it was admissible as part of the res gestae. (Anderson v. Great Northern Ry. Co.,
During the examination of George Warner, a witness for appellant, with regard to whether he heard the train whistle immediately prior to the accident, appellant sought to have the witness refresh his recollection and memory from a typewritten statement made shortly after the accident, signed but not written by the witness, which offer the court upon objection rejected, because a sufficient foundation had not been made, which ruling was correct because it had not been shown the witness needed to refresh his memory. (70 C.J. 582, sec. 748.)
Reversed and remanded for a new trial. Costs to appellant.
Budge, Morgan, Holden and Ailshie, JJ., concur. *403