185 P. 938 | Ariz. | 1919
The plaintiff-appellee was the owner and operator of a public service automobile carrying
The grounds of negligence charged in the complaint against defendant are as follows:
(2) In negligently failing and omitting to keep an outlook for automobiles passing over said crossing.
(3) In negligently omitting and failing to reduce the speed of the locomotive to a rate of not exceeding six miles an hour when approaching said crossing, it being dangerous to exceed that rate at said crossing, when in fact it was negligently running at the time of the accident at a rate of about thirty miles per hour.
(4) In negligently omitting and failing to keep its said locomotive under proper control so that it could have been stopped in time to have avoided said collision.
(5) In negligently omitting and failing to ring its bell at a distance of not less than eighty rods from said crossing, and to keep the same ringing until past said “ crossing.
(6) In negligently omitting and failing to maintain a watchman or other automatic signal, or other appliance to warn travelers of the approach of its locomotives and cars at said crossing at the time of the collision and accident.
The defendant set up in its answer that the injury and damage claimed were caused solely by the negligence of plaintiff in not keeping his automobile in control, in operating it at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed, and in wholly failing to stop or look or listen for the approach of defendant’s engine.
The defendant also pleaded contributory negligence, assigning as grounds thereof the same acts of negligence as above set forth in its first ground of defense. From a verdict and judgment in favor
We will consider these instructions in the order of their assignment.
The court defined negligence as follows:
“In a general sense, negligence is the absence of ordinary care, or negligence may be otherwise defined as doing something which under existing circumstances and conditions a person of ordinary care and prudence would not do, or, on the other hand, omitting to do something which, under the existing circumstances and conditions, a person of ordinary care and prudence would have done.”
In Railroad Co. v. Jones, 95 U. S. 439-441, 24 L. Ed. 506 (see also, Rose’s U. S. Notes), negligence is defined as follows:
“Negligence is the failure to do. what a reasonable and prudent person would ordinarily have done under the circumstances of the situation, or doing what such a person under the existing circumstances would not have done. The essence of the fault may lie in omission or commission.”
Tested by this definition of negligence, we think the instruction given, and to which exception is taken, is erroneous. Literally, it defines caution or care of a prudent person, and pronounces it negligence. The omission to do something that a prudent person would not have done under the existing conditions ordinarily would be commended as most proper. But when the expression is viewed broadly and sympathetically, it is difficult, if not unreasonable, to believe that the jury misunderstood what was intended to be stated by the court, or that it
The next instruction is based upon paragraph 2164, Civil Code, and is in these words:
“The court instructs the jury that all locomotives must be provided with a twenty-pound weight bell, which must be rung at leas]; a distance of eighty rods from the crossing of any street, road, or highway, and the bell must be kept ringing until the crossing is passed or the locomotive stopped and that a failure to do this is negligence; so, in this case, if you believe from the evidence that the defendant was negligent in this regard, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, and that the plaintiff exercised ordinary care for his own safety, your verdict should be for the plaintiff.”
The statute is that each locomotive must have a bell of at least twenty-pounds weight, which shall be rung1 at a distance of not less than eighty rods from the crossing of any public street, road or highway, and the railroad is made liable for all damages any person may sustain by reason of a noncompliance with this requirement.
It is not correct as a common-law instruction because it fails to recognize that other signals, such as the blowing of the whistle, may be employed with equal effectiveness to warn or inform persons to be on the lookout. The crossing admittedly being a dangerous one, the duty of the company under the common law doubtless was not only to ring the bell at eighty rods or earlier; and to keep it ringing continuously until the crossing was reached or crossed, but also to sound the whistle at ‘frequent intervals. Now, the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses was to the effect that both of these things were done. They say the bell was rung at eighty rods and continuously until the engine collided with the automobile; also that the whistle was sounded at 1,100 feet and 250 feet from the crossing, the last-time with two long and two short blasts. The effort to signal the engine’s approach by sounding the whistle was completely ignored in the instruction. At common law, the duty is to adequately warn, not in any particular way, but by any means that are effective. It might be by watchman or automatic signals, or by whistling or by ringing a bell, or by all of these combined, but when the evidence shows that two or more of these were actually employed in a given instance, as here, an instruction that, if the jury find that one of these was not employed, the defendant is guilty of negligence per se is erroneous because the jpry might be satisfied that the signal ignored in the instruction was not only given, but was sufficient warning to. all persons
The statutory signals at public crossings are not prescribed for the purpose or with the idea of relieving the railroad from using other means of warning where available or necessaTy. They are merely the minimum of duty to warn- (Kinyon v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co., 118 Iowa, 349, 96 Am. St. Rep. 382, 92 N. W. 40); and, because they are such and made so by written law, a neglect to give them is negligence per se, and if by reason of a noncompliance with them a person suffers damage, he may recover if at the time he is exercising ordinary care. As the statute (paragraph 2164, Civ. Code) makes the failure to ring the bell at eighty rods from any crossing negligence, and does not require a continual ringing until the crossing is passed or engine stopped, as stated in the instruction, the court incorrectly defined statutory negligence, and, as we have already seen, the instruction was erroneous under the common law, taking, as it does, from the consideration of the jury the warnings testified to by the sounding of the whistle.
In instruction No. 3, the jury were advised of the company’s duty to keep a constant lookout for persons at the crossing, and that, if by so doing the plaintiff’s automobile would have been discovered in time to avoid the accident, the verdict should be for the plaintiff. . This instruction ignored the defense of contributory negligence. It is well settled that, before a recovery can be had in this kind of action, the plaintiff himself must be free from negligence, or must not have contributed to his own injury, and that it is error, where the defense of contributory negligence is pleaded and supported by
On the question of the duty of the plaintiff to stop, look and listen before attempting to make the crossing, the court instructed the jury, in part, as follows:
“A traveler is not in all cases necessarily guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look and listen before crossing a railroad track because there may be modifying circumstances excusing him from so doing. The traveler may not be in fault in failing to look and listen, if misled without his fault, as where the view may be obstructed by objects, and other loud noises may interfere with his hearing. These are questions for your determination. ”
"We think the unquestioned facts and circumstances of this case did not exempt the plaintiff from looking and listening. While his view of the railroad track in the direction from which the defendant’s engine was approaching was somewhat obscured, yet at places upon the highway upon which he was traveling it is uncontroverted that by looking he must have seen the track for at least 180 feet. By actual survey and observation, one such point on the highway was about fifty feet from the crossing. His own witnesses placed the distance at from fifteen to thirty feet. He knew, or should have known, that by looking he could obtain a view of defendant’s track, and he also knew that it was a dangerous crossing, having, by his own statement, crossed it hundreds of times in the last four years. In another part of the instruction, the court properly
Shearman & Redfield, volume 2, section 476, make the statement that “it is a rule of almost invariable application that a traveler,” before attempting to cross a . railroad track, must look and listen for approaching trains, and in section 478 it is said that, if there are obstructions, travelers seeing them are bound on their part to use additional precautions for the purpose of ascertaining whether a train is 'approaching. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Crisman, 19.Colo. 30, 34 Pac. 286; Pogue v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 127 Minn. 79, 148 N. W. 889.
In the next instruction excepted to, the jury were told:
“I instruct you that the plaintiff need not prove affirmatively that he looked and listened before crossing the track. The presumption is that he did so,*158 and the burden of proof that he did not look and listen is upon the defendant railway company, and must be proved by the preponderance of the testimony on its part.”
In the statement of facts in connection with the next preceding instruction it appears that the plaintiff, by looking at points thirty and fifty feet from the crossing, could have seen an approaching engine or train on defendant’s track. Witness Hagan, testifying for plaintiff, said:
“When you are driving a car down that road and reach a point where the driver is about thirty feet from the track, you can see clear down the railroad track. If you stopped your car at that point, you could ascertain whether it was safe to go on or not.”
In view of the fact that plaintiff could have seen by looking,- should he have the benefit of a presumption that he did look? It seems that a more rational presumption would be that he did not look, as, if he had looked and seen the approaching engine when he was fifty or thirty feet from the crossing, instinctively his endeavor would have been to stop his car and avert the accident. vThe plaintiff says his car was about six feet from the track and the engine was about twenty feet from tjie crossing when he first saw it. Presumptions should not be indulged in to overcome proven or palpable facts, but rather to supply what cannot be proven, but in the nature of things must have existed. The converse of the proposition stated in the instruction, under the facts in this case, is the correct rule. We quote from Herbert v. Southern Pacific Ry. Co., 121 Cal. 227, 53 Pac. 651, and the rule there stated seems to be the one of universal application:
“The railroad track of a steam railway must itself be regarded as a sign of danger, and one intending to cross must avail himself of every opportunity to look and to listen for approaching trains. What he
Plaintiff says this instruction was approved in Steele v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 21 Wash. 287, 57 Pac. 820. The facts in that case were not the same as the facts" in this case, further than that it was a railroad crossing accident. In that case Steele, who was a minor, was in the act of crossing the defendant’s railroad track, and, while attempting to avoid an engine on one track, he stepped on to another track, where he was struck by some cars that had been detached from the engine. At the time he was struck, he was watching the engine, and, having no warning that the cars had been separated from the engine, he neglected to look for them on another track from the one the engine was moving on, and therefore failed to see the detached ears until he was struck. The court held that under the existing conditions the boy was not guilty of contributory negligence in failing to see the detached cars — a very different situation from the one here. In the Steele case, the injured party was evidently led to believe that his safety required him to keep an outlook for the engine from which, without his knowing it, the cars that ran him down were detached. His vision followed the only danger that his youthful mind told him to be present. He was thrown off his guard. That the Washington court did not intend- the instruction in the Steele case as a statement of a principle or rule applicable to every case growing out of' accidents at railroad crossings is apparent from its holding in Woolf v. Wash. Ry. & Nav. Co., 37 Wash. 491, 79 Pac. 997, wherein it was decided that the
Instruction No. 6 is subject to criticism, in that it was inapplicable to the facts of the case. It advised the jury that if there was lack of vigilance on the part of plaintiff due to an omission of duty by defendant, or if plaintiff was thrown off of his guard by defendant, the plaintiff’s want of vigilance could not be regarded as negligence. Under a proper state of facts, the proposition of law is undoubtedly good. There is, however, no evidence in this case that plaintiff was thrown off of his guard by any act or omission of defendant.
The court instructed the jury upon wilful and reckless negligence. There was no charge in the complaint of that kind of negligence; neither was there any proof of any such negligence. The instruction, like the preceding one, was outside of the issues, and should not have been given. Denman v. Johnston, 85 Mich. 387, 48 N. W. 565.
Finally, the defendant complains because the court refused an instruction offered by it defining contributory negligence. That was practically the only defense made by the defendant, and we think we have stated enough of the facts developed at the trial to show that there was substantial evidence to support this defense. • In such case, it was the duty of the court to instruct the jury as requested. The tendered instruction was a correct statement of the law, and should have been given.
We think the defendant was entitled to a new trial, and that the court erred in overruling its motion. The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded, with directions that the new trial be granted.
CUNNINGHAM, C. J., and BAKUN, J., concur.