52 Cal. 602 | Cal. | 1878
1. The plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence as defeats the action. (Sims v. M. & N R. R. Co. 29 Ga. 95.)
2. To the point that the failure to ring the bell did not entitle plaintiff to a recovery: The statute requiring a bell- to be rung on approaching a highway crossing, is for the benefit of j>ersons traveling along the highway—for the benefit of persons making a lawful use of the highway, and not for the benefit of those who unlawfully convert it into a bed to sleep upon. ( O'Donnell v. P. & W. R. R. Co. 6 R. I. 211; Holmes v. The Central &c. Co. 87 Ga. 596.)
The plaintiff was not in a position to claim the benefit of the statute. He was not traveling upon the highway, nor was he, in fact, upon the traveled crossing.
3. Contributory negligence is the doctrine of this Court. (Kline v. Cent. Pac. R. Co. 37 Cal. 400; Needham S. F. &. S. J. R. Co. 37 Cal. 409; Flynn v. S. F. & S. F. R. Co. 40 Cal. 14; Flemming v. W. P. R. Co. 49 Cal. 253.)
C. N. C. Rowell and A. B. Paris, for Eespondent.
1. If defendant could have avoided running over plaintiff, they were bound to so.
And this statute is different from those under which decisions referred to in appellant’s citations upon this point were made, and amendatory of the section referred to in Hittell, and the distinction is this: That the law of 1861 made defendant liable for all damages sustained by reason of the neglect to ring the bell or blow the whistle, while the Act of 1872 makes it liable for all damages when it fails to comply with the statutory provisions.
1. The 486th section of the Civil Code, providing that a railroad corporation shall be liable for all damages sustained by_any person and caused by the locomotive of the corporation, when a bell is not sounded or a whistle blown, as directed by that section, does not abrogate the doctrine of contributory negligence, or operate to give a right of action where the negligence of the plaintiff, if an adult, or if an infant, as here, the negligence of the parent or person standing in loco parentis, materially and proximately contributed to the injury.
2. The jury, in response to the special issues submitted to them, found that neither the infant plaintiff nor his parents were chargeable with negligence which contributed to the injury of the plaintiff. The defendant moved the Court below for a new trial, on the ground that the evidence did not support the verdict in these respects. The motion was denied in the Court below. We think it should have been granted.
The plaintiff, an infant of some six years, seems to have been permitted by his parents to make use of the roadway of the defendants as a play-ground, and to lie down bn the railroad track unattended. As to whether he was asleep upon the track, or awake, there is some conflict in the evidence. But this is not material—for in either case such conduct amounted to negli
Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.