18 Or. 189 | Or. | 1889
This is an action brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for an injury alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant while he was a passenger on one of its trains. By his answer the defendant denied the negligence alleged, and averred that the negligence of the plaintiff contributed to his injury. To this the plaintiff filed his reply, a.nd, issue being thus joined, the trial was proceeded with until the plaintiff rested his .case, when the defendant, by his counsel, moved for a judgment of non-suit, upon the ground that the evidence showed that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, which the court allowed, and from which the present appeal is taken. Explanatorily, it may be said that the evidence showed that large piles of wood were corded, at places along the track, about one foot or a foot and a half from the cars, and so high that passengers often could not see out on account of it; that from one of these piles some of the sticks fell upon the cars, and through the window at which the plaintiff was sitting, with his arm resting on the window-sill, causing the injury complained of. As relevant to the point upon which this, case must be determined, it is necessary to'understand how the injury occurred. Mr. O’Leary, a witness for the plaintiff, testified: “It hit him in the palm of the hand; that is where the wood hit him. It was not on the elbow. The elbow went up against the
It will be observed that both witnesses agree that the hand was inside, and that the elbow was outside, of the window; that the stick of wood which did the injury came through the open window, and one says struck the palm of his hand, and the other, caught in the mouth of his coat-sleeve; but both agree that the stick did not hit the elbow and as to the manner it operated in jamming the arm backwards and producing the injury. The plaintiff’s testimony is that his arm was resting on the window-sill, but that no part of his arm wTas outside of the car, although he admitted it was outside of the window. This must be based on the idea that the window-sill slightly extended beyond the exterior surface of the car. The truth is, it is generally difficult to reconcile the testimony in cases of this character, and reach a state of facts not disputed and beyond the reach of controversy. At any rate, in our judgment, the evidence submitted by the plaintiff tended substantially to establish this state of facts: That the plaintiff, while riding as a passenger on one of the defendant’s trains, rested his arm on the window-sill of an open window, with his hand inside, but his elbow extending a few inches outside of the window; that alongside of the track a great quantity of cord-wood was piled at places, so high as to obscure a view from the window of the cars, and at a distance of a foot or a foot and a half from the cars; that while thus riding some of the sticks of cord-wood fell from the pile, and against the cars, and through the window, upon his palm, or caught in the mouth of his coat-sleeve near the palm, and jammed his arm backward, breaking it, and badly lacerating his arm and hand. As here used, when it is said that the elbow was outside of the window, it is meant that it was outside of the surface of the window, and exposed to injuries from external objects. It was so treated at the argument, and it will be so considered by us.
The inquiry, then, presented by this record is: Do the
To have adjudged the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence, upon the facts, the court must have found that there was want of ordinary care on his part, and a proximate connection between such want of ordinary care and the injury complained of. Our case, then, is thus put by Mr. Beach: “(1) Did the plaintiff exercise ordinary care, under the circumstances? (2) Was there a proximate connection between his act or omission and the hurt he complains of?” Beach Contrib. Neg. § 3, p. 7. If these two questions be answered in the affirmative, the two elements concur which constitute contributory negligence,
The facts show that plaintiff’s elbow was slightly extended outside of the window, but that the other portion of his arm and hand was inside of the window. The elbow was not hit, but a stick of wood, falling through the open window at which he sat, and upon the sill on which his arm rested, struck the part of the arm inside of the window, and caught in the mouth of the coat-sleeve, which, with the motion of the train, jammed the arm backward against the frame of the window, and produced the injury complained of. Now, it will be noted (1) that, although the elbow was outside of the window, it was not hit, and the injury did not arise as the direct consequences of the exposed condition of the elbow to external objects with which it might come in contact by reason thereof; and (2) that the hand and part of the arm which were struck with the stick were within the window. The facts concede that an injury would be likely to happen if the elbow had not been exposed, while the arm continued to rest upon the window-sill in the same relative position. By merely changing the angle of the inclination of the arm, so that the elbow would not be exposed, leaving the arm otherwise in the same relative position, a similar injury would have likely happened or resulted, upon the facts. But in neither case, whether the elbow was inside or outside of the window, is the injury occasioned by or the result of its contact with external objects. Yet this judgment punishes the plaintiff with the same consequences as if the injury resulted from exposing the arm outside of the window to contact with external objects. In that view it makes no difference whether the arm or elbow is inside or outside of the window when the injury occurred,—the same legal consequences ensue; but this cannot be, unless it be a negligent act to rest the arm on the window-sill of the car, irrespective of the fact whether the injury occurred to the exposed part of the arm or not.
The counsel for the defendant insists that the plaintiff
But why is it contributory negligence, within the reason of these cases? The answer is, because, in projecting his elbow or arm out of the window, he was bound to know, as a reasonable man, in the exercise of ordinary care and foresight, that there was liability to injury from the exposed condition of the arm coming in contact with some external obstacle or force. He ought to know, to expose his arm or elbow under'the surrounding circumstances, that it was dangerous, and liable to result in injury to it, because a prudent man might well foresee the possibility of such an occurrence; and, if he do not avoid it by the exercise of such reasonable foresight, he may justly be held to have taken upon himself the risk of such a peril. It is therefore considered in these cases to be a want of ordinary care for a passenger riding in a car to protrude his arm or elbow out of the window, and if he does, and is injured by reason thereof, it results, as a consequence, that his own want of ordinary care has contributed directly to produce such injury as the proximate cause thereof. But how is this to apply to the facts in the case at bar? It was not the elbow of the plaintiff, or any part of his arm that was exposed to injury from outside obstacles, that caused the injury. His elbow, or the part of the arm outside of the window, was not hit. The stick of wood struck the palm of his hand, or so near it as to catch in the mouth .of his coat-sleeve, which was inside of the window, and not exposed to external objects, unless they came inside of the window, as the' evidence here shows. The cases referred to, and relied
Be it remembered that the injury did not arise because the elbow projected, but because the stick struck the palm or wrist inside of the window, where it had a right to be, and worked its injury, and the case, upon its facts, would seem to stand precisely as if the arm rested on the window-sill entirely within the car. The law is well established that this cannot be declared to be negligence in se. In Farlow v. Kelly, 108 U. S. 208, it was held that it was not contributory negligence for a passenger to rest his arm upon the window-sill of a car in which he was riding without allowing it to project. Such an act creates no presumption of negligence, and cannot be declared negligence in law. Breen v. Railroad Co., 109 N. Y. 297; Winters v. Railroad Co., 39 Mo. 470. The inception of the injury being inside of the window, it was not caused by any exposure of the arm outside of it, and can we say, logically or judicially, that the act of the defendant contributed to produce it? It would seem, as to the facts upon which that injury was predicated, that he stood without fault; for although the plaintiff may have been negligent in allowing his elbow slightly to extend outside of the window, yet if that did not cause the injury, and the result was the same as though he exercised the care required, and kept his .arm inside, then such-want of care, as was said in Walker v. Westfield, 39 Vt. 246, did not contribute to produce such injury, and it is the same as though he was without fault.
As the injury occurred, then, the plaintiff was under no legal obligation to assume or anticipate that sticks or a stick of falling cord-wood would be projected inside of the
The judgment must be reversed, and the non-suit set aside.