76 P. 436 | Kan. | 1904
The opinion of the court was delivered by
At a crossing near the town of Lane a train of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company collided with a .team and wagon driven by C. L. Griffith, destroying the wagon, killing one mule, crippling another, and greatly injuring Griffith. He
In describing the crossing and the situation where the accident occurred, he averred that on the right of way, and immediately east of the crossing, the company permitted to be constructed and maintained two frame buildings which obstructed the view of the railroad-track east of the highway, and also that at that time the company had placed on its sidé-track a boarding-train which extended easterly from the highway, and that this, together with the buildings mentioned, completely obstructed the view of a traveler approaching on the highway south of the railroad-tracks. No negligence was imputed to the railway company on account of the location of the buildings or the position of the boarding-train. In the course of the trial, which resulted in a verdict in favor of Griffith, the court charged the jury as follows :
“The particular acts of negligence imputed to the defendant in this action by the plaintiff are that it permitted to be constructed and maintained two frame buildings in such a manner as to obstruct the view of its track east from the public highway, and that it placed upon its side-track south of its main track a train of cars known as a boarding-train, extending easterly from about the center of the public highway in Lane, Kan., where plaintiff desired and attempted to cross defendant’s track, to near the station-house of defendant.”
The pleadings did not make the location of the buildings and boarding-train a ground of negligence or a basis of recovery. That they were on the right of way was stated in the petition, but it was- not averred'that they were unnecessarily or negligently placed and maintained there. It is sometimes necessary that there be buildings on the right of way of a railroad near a public crossing, and also that cars stand on side-tracks, near a crossing for a short time, in such positions that they would obstruct the view of a traveler approaching a railroad-track; in other cases, the placing and maintenance of such obstructions may be wholly unnecessary, and may constitute negligence as to one injured in a collision with a train, where the injury would have been averted if the view had been unobstructed. The plaintiff, however, did not charge negligence in this respect., and the defendant had no cause to anticipate that it would be required to meet a charge of negligence not stated in
The existence of the obstructions mentioned in the petition and' shown in the testimony may have been the reason for requiring other and different warnings of the approach of the train to the crossing than were given, and their existence, on the other hand, may have explained why the plaintiff below did not see the approaching train, and to some extent relieves him from the imputation of contributory negligence ; but in no event was it competent, under the pleadings, to treat the existence and location of the buildings and cars as negligence upon which the jury might base a recovery. A plaintiff must recover, if at all, on the specific grounds stated in his petition. The specific acts of negligence alleged in this case were the reckless rate of speed and the lack of proper warnings of the approach of the train, and there can be no recovery for any other act. If other grounds of negligence were relied on they should have been distinctly set forth in the petition, and it was not competent for
For the error mentioned the judgment of the district court must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.