12 Mont. 163 | Mont. | 1892
Lead Opinion
Action to recover damages for the alleged killing of four head of horses by the negligent and careless running of an engine and cars against and over them by defendant’s agents and servants in the operation of its railroad. Defendant answered plaintiff’s complaint, not denying the killing of said animals, as alleged, by the running of defendant’s engine and cars against and upon them, but denying that the injury happened through the negligent or careless conduct of defendant or its agents or employees in the operation of its railroad. And for a further defense defendant alleged that such injury happened through plaintiff’s own carelessness, which contributed thereto. Upon these two points of issue, as we are
The main proposition to be considered upon this appeal is whether or not the verdict is supported by sufficient evidence. Appellant contends that it appears from the evidence that the killing of said animals happened through unavoidable accident, without negligence on the part of appellant; or, as appellant’s counsel states the proposition, “ if defendant was in the exercise of ordinary care, and the billing of the animals resulted notwithstanding, then there is no liability; ” and appellant contends that the evidence shows the state of facts involved in this premise. On the other hand, respondent insists that the verdict is supported by the evidence, which he asserts shows negligence and carelessness attending the killing of the animals in question, and that respondent in no way contributed thereto. It appears that the killing of said animals happened near a place called “Kohr’s Siding,” on the line of defendant’s railroad in Deer Lodge County. Plaintiff resides about five miles distant from that place. The horses in question were turned out by plaintiff to graze upon the commons in the vicinity of his ranch; and between 2 and 4 o’clock on the morning of September 24,1890, they were killed at the point aforesaid, by being struck by an engine and train of cars running over defendant’s railroad. It appears to be conceded that said stock went upon defendant’s railroad track without the fault or negligence of the plaintiff (leaving out of consideration now the point made by appellant that the turning of said stock loose upon the commons amounted to contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff). The evidence shows that the railroad company had enclosed its right of way at the place in question by a fence; but it is also shown that at said place the lines of said fence were severed by gateways, and the evidence seems to be quite conclusive that such gates were broken down, and lying on the ground, or at least open so as to admit of stock passing freely through the fence upon said railroad track at the time in question., Appellant insists that such gates were opened or broken down by others than its agents, and without its knowledge or permission; but
The above statements were 'made by said section foreman while testifying as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff". He was also called by defendant, and described said right of way fence. In this connection he said : “My duty is to see that the fences and gates are kept in good shape. The gates were all right until after the accident. I never had occasion to repair the gates before that; It was all in good condition. I have had occasion to close them several times. Almost every morning I went there I closed them. It was my duty to run over the track and see that everything was in good shape, and then come back and go to work. Almost every morning when I came down I found the gates open. I found them open, and closed them very often.” He further said: “ I never called Mr. Moreau’s attention to those gates before the 24th of September, although I found them open very often. I suppose they go through those gates to get to the siding to load and unload cars. That is the only way they can get there unless they pull down the fence. It is a fact that when cars are left there on the siding to be loaded, that they make use of those gates for the purpose of loading the cars. That is the custom.”
Defendant introduced its superintendent of bridges and road-master as witness on its behalf, who in the course of his testimony said: “It is my business to look after the fences, gates, crossings, etc., and keep them in shape as much as possible. Almost all the main line is fenced in.”
A considerable portion of the record is occupied in the recitation of testimony of witnesses concerning the condition of said right of way fence and said gates. Testimony on this subject was brought into the case by plaintiff and defendant, and not a single objection or exception appears by the record to have been made thereto by either party during the trial.
The jury was asked by defendant to return special findings,
Passing to the other branch of the case it appears the jury found that there was negligence on the part of appellant’s engineer of the passenger train, in that he made no effort to stop said
The passenger train in question was run northward from Butte to Garrison, during said night, and passed by “Kohr’s Siding” at 3:35 o’clock of the morning in question. The testimony of the engineer and fireman who accompanied said passenger train is to the effect that when said train passed “Kohr’s Siding” it was running at the rate of thirty-five or forty miles per hour; that, as this train passed said place, two horses were struck by it and thrown off the track, and that no other animals were struck by said train; that the animals struck were not observed in time to avoid running upon them, because the darkness was increased by fog or mist in the atmosphere at the time and place, and for that reason the engineer and fireman were unable to see as far as usual in front of the train; that, had the weather been clear, the engineer could have seen seven or eight car lengths in front of his engine, and with these conditions and the exercise of care he could have seen said animals and frightened them from the track by sounding the whistle, and avoided striking them; but because the night was stormy, and rain or mist was falling, and fog prevailing, the animals were not observed in time to sound a whistle before they were struck and passed, and therefore no whistle was sounded, or other alarm attempted. Appellant insists that the testimony of the engineer and fireman of said train, they being the only persons present at the moment of said accident, and observing the conditions, and being uncontradicted, as appellant contends, is therefore conclusive to the effect that the killing of said animals was purely accidental, and could not have been prevented by the exercise of due care. The testimony of the engineer and fireman of said passenger train should therefore be carefully reviewed, and considered in comparison with all the testimony and the circumstances surrounding the subject in question,
The fireman who accompanied the same engine, Nelson Bostwick, was called on the behalf of defendant, and iu the-course of his testimony, stated: “I was firing for Mr. Howe on the occasion of the striking of these animals on the 24th of September last. I first saw the animals about two car lengths of the engine. The engineer did not make any effort to stop the train and prevent the accident, because he did not have time to do so. He went over them so quick. I remember where Kolir’s Siding is. With reference to that siding we struck the animals about a quarter of a mile south. I remember the curve at that point. In reference to the curve it was just where we were going off from it that we struck them, as near as I can remember.....The night was very dark, and it was kind of foggy at that particular place. At that time, as we were going out of that curve, if it had not been foggy, we could have seen over two telegraph poles in advance of the engine. We could have seen further if it had been on a straight track. That is as far as we could have seen, even if it had not been foggy. The fog was of an ordinary density.....At the time we struck the animals we were going at the rate of about thirty-five miles an hour.....We only struck two animals, that is all we saw. I could not tell exactly in what distance a train going at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour, and well equipped with air brakes, could have been stopped, if we had seen the animals, but we could have stopped within forty or fifty rods, that is probably the outside, but it might have been stopped a little sooner. I saw those horses just at the curve; they were both together. As near as we could tell, we struck them both at the same time, or right within an instant of one another. It threw them off the track, one of them going
Other testimony was introduced by defendant to the effect that the weather was stormy, and rain or mist was falling, and fog prevailing at the time in question. Testimony was also introduced by defendant that there was some curvature of the railroad track at the place in question, but it is not shown by such testimony how the view of the engineer is obstructed by reason of such curvature. The testimony introduced by the plaintiff is to the effect that such curvature is slight, and, notwithstanding the same, the track lies in plain and unobstructed view approaching from either direction to the place where said animals were killed. McMaster, the plaintiff, in testifying as to said curve in the track, said: “ There is very little curve there; it is almost straight.” He was corroborated by one of defendant’s witnesses, McDuffy, who testified: “ It is not a very quick curve. It is little curved there, and after you strike the curve it is almost straight track going north.” Plaintiff introduced testimony tending to prove that early on
Plaintiff’s horses were found lying beside the track, bearing the appearance of having been struck by a passing train; and the position which these animals occupied as respecting one another, when found, was shown to be as follows: Proceeding northward in the same direction in which said passenger train was running, the distance from where the first animal was found to the last was shown to be about eight hundred feet; the distance between the first and second being more than five hundred feet.
As to the position of said animals when found by said section foreman, he testified: “ I remember finding some horses killed about the morning of the 24th of September last. There were four horses and a colt. I killed them when I found out that they
Now, in connection with the testimony of the engineer and fireman of that train, on whose testimony it is asserted the railroad company must be dismissed as without any fault, the above testimony of the section foreman should be noticed. First observing that it is testified and not contradicted, that the curve in said road at the point in question is but slight; that it was almost straight. The section foreman, who found said horses, was called for both plaintiff and defendant. He was in charge of this section of the road. He buried said horses and after-wards they were dug up by plaintiff’s order, so that said foreman ought to know in what position he found said horses, relative to said curve, and to one another. It was a slight curve, and he found “the first one about the middle of the curve, and there was another on the other side, about a couple of telegraph poles ahead of it.” (It is shown in evidence by defendant’s witnesses that the distances between telegraph poles is about one hundred and eighty feet, and if by a couple of telegraph poles he means double that distance, his statement is not far from agreeing with plaintiff, who measured the distance
It has been sought to introduce into the judicial consideration of the evidence in this case a remarkable philosophic theorem and conclusion in respect to the effect of the curve in said railroad track mentioned in the evidence. The witnesses all admit that said curve was slight, the road approached it on a straight line, made a slight curve, and proceeded in a straight line again. Without any statement of witnesses in the record to the effect that the curve in said track was such as to cause the path illumined by the headlight to depart from the track, leaving the track in the dark for any distance whatever, that theory has been sought to be imported into the judicial consideration here. The premise is: First. There is a slight curve in the track at the
It is clearly shown what might have been done by the exercise of ordinary care toward preventing the destruction of said animals if the weather was clear, and from these facts it appears that, in case the weather was clear, it is very likely the destruction could have been prevented by the exercise of due care. The testimony of the fireman accompanying said passenger train is to that effect: that said stock was up and moving and that no alarm was sounded, and no effort made to stop or reduce the speed of the train. The evidence is conflicting as to the state of the weather at the time and place in question. The jury had before it the testimony of Patterson, who rode on said passenger train from Butte to Deer Lodge, which was to the effect that the weather was clear a short distance from the particular place where said animals were killed, and that it was not dark at the time, being about 3:30 o’clock of a September morning. There is no dispute about the time said train passed "Eohr’s Siding.” The report of the engineer of the freight train, which passed the place at the hour of 2:45 or 2:50 o’clock of the same morning, was to the effect that the weather was clear at said place aud time. This report was made immediately after the occurrence, and engineer Smith, in his testimony, makes no explanation as to his having wilfully misstated the condition of the weather in said report, or as to his having been mistaken in such statement. The report was made to the
Appellant requested the court “to charge the jury that the testimony as to the circumstances of the killing of said animals was uncontradicted; that it was to the effect that the killing was an unavoidable accident, and that it failed to show negligence on the part of the train men, and that the jury should so find.” The court refused to so instruct the jury, and appellant assigns such refusal as error.
This request is based on the theory of the case, and the showing of the evidence contended for by appellant, which we have been unable to find, borne out by our investigations thereof, and’ therefore must conclude that the court committed no error in such refusal.
Appellant argues that respondent committed an act amounting to negligence, which contributed to the destruction of said horses, by turning them out to graze on the public domain in the vicinity of his ranch. We cannot concur in this proposition. Stockraising, by utilizing the vast open ranges of this country, is, and has been since its settlement, one of the principal industries which contributes to the prosperity of the common carrier as well as to the individual citizen. Numerous statutes have been passed, from time to time during the history of Montana, regulating the industry of stockraising, and clearly recognizing and sanctioning the matter of allowing stock to graze on the public domain as proper and lawful. The whole theory of the general legislation of this State is against the proposition advanced by appellant’s counsel. It is our opinion that the judgment ought to be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). It is claimed that negligence by defendant is shown in two respects: —
1. In not keeping the gates mentioned closed and locked. In the complaint the negligence alleged isas follows: “That the said defendant, by its agents and servants, not regarding its
But as to keeping the gates closed: The place was in the country, away from any town. If it was the company’s duty to keep the gates closed, there was but one effectual method of performing this duty. That was to keep a servant at every gate along the line (and the evidence shows that they were numerous), to close them after careless passers, who were strangers to the defendant. Is the defendant liable for such strangers’ acts? If this be the law, the defendant must put a guard over its entire property to protect it from negligent acts of third persons, which negligent acts may result in injuries to others, and for which the defendant is to be held liable. I do not understand that such duty rests upon the defendant. The jury found that it did, to be sure; but respondent’s counsel promptly abandoned any such ground in this court. In that I think that he was correct. I agree with him that in the matter of the gates no negligence was either pleaded or proved.
In Sweeny v. Great Falls etc. Ry. Co. 11 Mont. 523, the allegation of the complaint as to negligence was that plaintiff was working for defendant under defendant’s car, and that defendant carelessly and negligently, and without any notice or warning to plaintiff, backed or ran an engine against said car, and set it in motion, and while so in motion by reason of said careless and negligent act of defendant, the car ran over plaintiff, etc. After a careful examination of the evidence in that case, this court held that there was a failure of proof that the defendant moved the car without warning, as alleged, and that, therefore, the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict. So in the case at bar, the allegation of the complaint is the negligence in running the locomotive and cars. Proof in reference to the gates does not tend to support the said allegation.
2. I will now examine the cause of action as alleged and relied upon by the plaintiff’s attorney. The four horses were killed in the night between September 23 and 24, 1890. It may be taken as conceded that they were killed by defendant’s passenger train No. 5, which passed Kohr’s Siding, the place
Of course, circumstances may impeach a witness more conclusively than words. The circumstances which respondent calls to his aid are in two classes. I will examine them : —
1. It was sought to impeach defendant’s witnesses by evidence that the weather, instead of being misty and foggy, as the engineer and fireman testified, was clear. If this be true, much of the foundation of the defense is demolished, and defendant’s main witnesses are impeached upon a very material point, and the jury were justified in ignoring their testimony, as they did. Let us see. Witness Eamsdell testifies that the weather was bright and clear at 9 or 10 o’clock of the morning of the 24th. Byron Wood says that the weather was smoky, but the sun was shining so as to cast a shadow on the afternoon
But again, train No. 9 passed this point on the morning of the 24th, between 2 and 3 o’clock — about an hour before the accident. The engineer and fireman of No. 9 testified on the trial that the weather was then foggy and misty. To impeach this engineer of train No. 9, a report of his was introduced in evidence, in which he reports the weather at that time as clear. Grant that his report was true, and that his testimony on the trial was false, and that he was successfully impeached. What did this amount to at most? Simply that there was not fog or mist at the place of the accident an hour earlier in the night than the time of the accident. Can this be held as evidence that the fog and mist did not come up during the hour, and be present when train 5 appeared upon the scene? This would be indulging in meteorological presumptions unwarranted by any evidence in this case, or any experience of mankind. Again, granting that the engineer of No. 9 was impeached, does that impeach the engineer and fireman of No. 5? If so, that would be reforming the old maxim, so that it could be said of a collection of witnesses on one side of the case unus falsas, omnes falsi.
Again, grant that there was no evidence of rain in the morning; that does not tend to show that fog and mist were not present in the night, and which fled before the sun. The whole evidence seeking to contradict the alleged presence of fog and mist at the time and place of the accident has not the substantiality of a cobweb. There was absolutely nothing in it upon which a jury could find an impeachment of the credibility of defendant’s witnesses.
2. As to the other circumstances of impeachment: Bespondent argues that the places in which the horses were killed establish that the manner of their taking off was other than as detailed by the defendant’s witnesses. He says that first one was killed; the second was killed at a point five hundred and forty-three feet further on; the next, one hundred and thirty-two feet beyond; and the last, one hundred and twenty-five feet further. That this fact shows that the engine chased the horses, taking them single-handed, picking them off one by one, as it was able
My remarks, made to this point, were filed with the majority opinion on March 28, 1892. Since that day, the majority opinion has received additional matter, among it the criticism of my views which is now contained therein. I have now, at the June term, carefully examined that opinion. There is matter therein to which, as it occurs to me, some pertinent suggestions might be made; but a further review on my part at this time would seem to me more in the nature of a debate than a judicial consideration, and neither useful nor profitable.