134 P. 567 | Utah | 1913
Tbis is an action brought by appellant, as father, to recover damages for the death of his son, a minor, which it is alleged was caused through the negligence of the respondent in operating its engine and cars at a street crossing in Salt Lake City. The acts and omissions constituting the negligence alleged in the complaint and relied on at the trial, in substance, are: That respondent carelessly and negligently ran and operated an engine, to which were attached two freight cars, in a certain street in Salt Lake City at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and at a speed in excess of that allowed by the ordinances of said city; that respondent carelessly and negligently failed and omitted to keep a lookout for persons about to cross or who might be on or near its tracks at .the intersection of Eighth West and South Temple Streets where the accident occurred; that it negligently failed to keep said engine and cars under control so that they might be stopped in time to avoid injury to persons who were crossing, or were about to cross, or who were using the intersection of the streets aforesaid; that it negligently failed to give warning as said engine and cars were approaching the intersection aforesaid; and that by reason of said acts and omissions said engine and cars were run at, on, and over said minor son, causing his death. Eespondent denied all the acts of negligence and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.
The salient facts developed at the trial are, substantially, as follows: On the 6th day of August, 1910, at about five o’clock p. m., or a little later, Horatio W. Newton, the deceased, of the age of nineteen years and eleven months, was engaged in delivering a daily evening newspaper in the west-
A young woman who lived on the east side of Eighth West Street, and south of the street intersection aforesaid heard .the noise of the Saltair train as it was coming west, and she at once went to the north window of the house in which she was staying for the purpose, as she says, of seeing the passengers on that train. When she arrived at the window she looked in a northerly or northwesterly direction and observed the deceased standing near the east sidewalk on Eighth West Street, and at or near the north rail of the south track on which the engine was being run. He was then facing in a northerly or northwesterly direction and was Standing astride of his bicycle apparently waiting, as she says, for the Saltair train to pass by him on the north track. She testified that the deceased stood in that position for from three to five minutes before the train passed him, but she frankly conceded that her judgment of time was unreliable. When she went to the window as aforesaid the Saltair train had not yet come within her field of vision, but she says she
A little girl, about twelve years of age at the time of the accident, a sister of the young woman whose testimony we have just referred to, also saw the deceased standing between the tracks, but she says he was standing further west than her sister stated he was. The little girl further testified that before the deceased crossed over the south track she saw him. riding a bicycle delivering papers, with a paper sack over his shoulder, and that in going north, and when he arrived at the south track, he got off the bicycle and walked across the south track, then turned west between the tracks and stood still near the north rail of the south track with one leg over the bicycle frame, and that in that position he stood apparently waiting for the Saltair train to pass by him. This witness also said that the deceased stood at the point in question for several minutes, but she too conceded that her judgment with respect to time was not good.. She further said that she saw the passengers waving their hands at the deceased and saw him doing the same thing towards the passengers; that she then noticed the engine with the twe cars rapidly approaching the deceased; and that when she saw the engine was about to strike him she turned and ran
Two passengers who were riding on the Saltair train also testified with respect to what they observed. Both of them said that the deceased was standing on or near the sidewalk running north and south on Eighth West Street. Otate of them seems to have paid particular attention to the deceased from the time he first noticed him standing, as the witness says, in a perilous or dangerous position, to the time when ■he was struck. This witness was riding in an open car. He says that he first noticed the deceased when the car on which the witness was riding was about seventy feet east ■of the place where the deceased was standing. The witness' also noticed the engine with the two cars running on the south track, and says that the engine was running at a rate of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour. The engine was running backward with the tender towards the deceased. When thé witness first noticed the. deceased the engine was about sixty feet to the rear or east of the car on which the witness was riding, and he at once perceived that unless the ■deceased changed his position he would be struck by the oncoming engine. The witness and others on the Saltair train who also saw his perilous position tried to attract the attention of the deceased by shouting and waving their hands to apprise him of his danger, but the latter did not seem to comprehend their purpose and simply waived his hands at them. At about this moment it se'ems the position of the deceased was also noticed by at least one of the two railroad men who were riding on the tender, one on the north and the other on the south side thereof, and immediately thereafter the engineer on the engine sounded several shrill blasts of the whistle, which were heard by about all of those who testified, but the deceased apparently did not hear them, at least he seemed perfectly oblivious to the danger threatening him. The testimony of this witness was on the main points corroborated by another passenger on the Saltair
From the whole evidence it is quite clear that if the deceased had looked to the east along the south track, he could have seen the engine approaching from the east for approximately a quarter of a mile, and that the engineer and trainmen could also have seen him in case he was standing where he was when the Saltair train passed him while the engine-was passing over the distance aforesaid.
It is conceded that the sides of the cars projected over the outside rails of the tracks about two and one-half feet, leaving a clear space between the passing cars of about eight and on§-half feet. From the evidence it is clear that the deceased was not standing on the south track, but that the rear wheel of his bicycle was so near the rail that the “running board” of the engine caught the wheel, and in doing so it seemed to jerk or pull the deceased in towards the engine, some part of which struck and killed him outright. Neither the cars nor the engine passed over any part of his body.
Appellant also proved that an ordinance of Salt Lake-City prohibits the running of trains at a speed exceeding twelve miles per hour at the point of the accident. It also-appeared that the passing Saltair train made much noise; that there was considerable commotion on the passenger train just before and about the time the deceased was struck, and that there were quite a number of trains and engines passing daily over the railroad tracks at the point where the accident occurred.
After producing the foregoing evidence the appellant rested, whereupon respondent also rested and moved the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in its favor for the rea
Counsel for the respondent seek to defend the ruling of the district court upon the grounds: (1) That the negligence in operating the engine was not the proximate cause of the accident; (2) that the evidence affirmatively shows that it was the negligence of the deceased that caused, or at least directly contributed, to his death.
"No doubt there are crossing accidents where the injured person may recover notwithstanding that he has, constructively or technically speaking, failed to look or listen just before attempting to cross the railroad track at a particular place and under peculiar circumstances.”
Where, therefore, tbe circumstances are such tbat it may reasonably be said tbat different minds, in viewing and considering tbe evidence, might arrive at different conclusions with respect to whether or not tbe injured person exercised ordinary care, tbe question of negligence must of necessity be determined as one of fact and not of law. While tbe substance of tbe foregoing statement is often found in tbe books and may be said to be a correct statement of tbe doctrine, yet such statements often leave tbe reader in doubt whether a given case falls within or without tbe doctrine. But, notwithstanding this, it is impossible to formulate a rule by which all cases can be determined.
Of course if the jury should find that the deceased stood where the witnesses say he stood for the space of several minutes before the Saltair train passed him, that he paid no attention to his surroundings, and was not in any way affected by the actions of the passengers on the Saltair train, and should further find that under all the circumstances he' was not exercising ordinary care for his own safety in that he failed to look for an approaching train, then they may find him guilty of negligence. In view of the circumstances and the inferences that may be deduced from the evidence, this question cannot be determined as a matter of law. Let us assume that the deceased saw the Saltair train approaching from the east when it was still 300 or more» feet east of the crossing, and that he could have safely passed over the tracks ahead of that train, yet was he bound to do so ? Certainly not. What he was bound to do was to use ordinary care, under all the circumstances, and before going on or near the track, unless he was excused for some good cause, was required to look and listen for an approaching train. That he looked and saw the Saltair train approaching there can be do doubt; that he stopped to let it pass is equally certain. As to that train, therefore, he had discharged his full
A large number of cases are cited by both sides in their respective briefs, but we need not review them, as that has been sufficiently done in the cases we have referred to. There is nothing in the cases cited by counsel from which it can be said that this case falls within the rule laid down in any one of the cases where we have held that negligence on the part of the injured person was established as a matter of law, but this ease falls squarely within the doctrine announced in those cases where we held the question to be . one of facts for the jury. In principle this case is not distinguishable from the case of Cromeenes v. Railroad Company, 37 Utah, 476, 109 Pac. 10, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 307. The only essential difference between that case and the one at
What we have said also disposes of the question of proximate cause. That, too, is a question of fact to be determined by the jury under proper instructions. With regard to that question we simply refer to the case of Lewis v. Rio Grande Wes. Ry. Co., 40 Utah 483 123 Pac. 97, and the cases there cited. The facts and circumstances of this case, we think, clearly bring it within the rule there announced’.
Por the reason stated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court, with directions to grant a new trial.