71 Wash. 409 | Wash. | 1912
This is an action for damages against the defendant, a common carrier, for an alleged negligent destruction of plaintiff’s automobile at a country crossing. The case was tried to the court. Findings were made in favor of plaintiff, and a judgment was entered thereon, from which the defendant has appealed.
The negligence charged is that, while the respondent was in the act of driving his automobile over the railroad crossing in a public highway, the machine became stalled crosswise of the track, the engine of the machine stopped running, the respondent was unable to start it or to move the machine off the track, and “the engineer and fireman in charge of defendant’s said train saw the plaintiff before the train got to him, and saw his automobile standing upon the
The court did not find, and the evidence does not show, that the engineer actually saw the machine. The court’s findings in this respect are that, when the respondent found that he could not extricate his machine, he ran north along the track and right of way toward the approaching train, a distance of 650 or 700 feet, lighting matches, waving his arms, and shouting to signal the engineer in charge of the train, and that, had the engineer been keeping a proper lookout ahead, he would have seen the respondent, who, while running down the straight track, was in plain view of the engineer in the rays of the headlight of the engine for at least 1,000 feet before the engine passed him, and would have seen his signals in time to have stopped the train before striking the machine.
The first point urged is that there is a variance between the pleadings and the evidence, and that the findings are not within the issues. The variance is immaterial. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1752; Irby v. Phillips, 40 Wash. 618, 82 Pac. 931; Richardson v. Moore, 30 Wash. 406, 71 Pac. 18.
The further consideration of the case necessitates a statement of the essential facts. The train which struck the automobile was a passenger train composed of nine cars, and was traveling from Tacoma in a southerly direction, at a speed of thirty-five to thirty-eight miles an hour. The engine was equipped with a standard electric headlight, burning brightly, and lighting the track so that an object thereon could be seen on a bright night a distance varyingly estimated by the locomotive engineers at from 1,000 to 1,800 feet. The track has a one degree curve for a distance of 200 feet immediately north of the crossing where the accident
The principal fact in dispute was as to whether the night was clear or foggy. The respondent’s witnesses asserted the former to be the fact, whilst the appellant’s witnesses insisted that the latter was the fact. The court found that “the night was clear, there being no fog to any extent or other atmospheric difficulty to interfere with the engineer’s view.” We accept the fact as found by the court.
The respondent contends that, conceding his negligence, the negligence had ceased; that appellant owed the duty of
We think the respondent has the correct view. His machine was within the public highway; he was in no sense a trespasser, although without the traveled portion of the road. The appellant knew of the presence of the highway, knew that it crossed the track at grade, and knew that it was traveled by the public. Moreover, it was the duty of the engineer to exercise reasonable care, and had he done so, under his own testimony, assuming that the night was clear, he would have seen the respondent and his signals a distance of 1,000 feet or more. This would have given him at least 1,500 feet in which to stop the train, according to his own statement. He testified that he was keeping a lookout ahead, but that the presence of the fog obscured his vision. One of the appellant’s witnesses, Mr. Champlain, a locomotive engineer, testified that the' engineer could see a man ahead a distance of 1,200 feet on a clear night. In failing to see the respondent and heed his signals, the engineer was clearly guilty of negligence. The act of a man running along a right of way at one o’clock in the morning, striking matches and waving his arms, is a circumstance that ought to attract the attention of a prudent engineer, and it was notice that there was danger ahead.
The doctrine of last clear chance is applied perhaps most frequently to cases where the plaintiff’s negligence has terminated, and where the defendant thereafter, in the exercise of reasonable care and owing a duty to exercise it, should have discovered the peril in time to have prevented an injury. It has also often been applied where it would be apparent to one in control of a dangerous agency, if exercis
In the Bulloch case, the plaintiff’s team, drawing a portable steam engine, had become stalled at the crossing of defendant’s road in a public highway, and was struck and killed by a passing train It was held that the defendant was guilty of negligence, if the engineer by the exercise of reasonable care could have seen that the road was obstructed, in time to stop his train before reaching the crossing, although he did not in fact see it. Elliott says that a railroad company is liable for an injury inflicted upon a traveler at a railroad crossing, notwithstanding his negligence, where the exercise of reasonable care on its part would have prevented the injury “after it discovered, or ought to have discovered, his danger and inability to take care of himself.” In the Anderson case, the plaintiff, a boy, while attempting to cross the defendant’s track in a street, got his foot caught in an opening between the platform and the rail, and while
“The obligations upon the public and the railroad company at an intersection of the track with a highway are correlative . . . Neither is relieved from the duty of carefully watching the crossing to avoid accidents by the assumption that the other is doing his or its whole duty at such a place;”
and that the same duty was not owed to a trespasser.
In the Fish case, the plaintiff, a boy twelve years of age, was attempting to cross the railroad track at an avenue in a city in the nighttime, and his foot was caught and held in a switch point in the tracks, a few feet without the street. While endeavoring to release his foot and making outcries, he was struck and injured by a train moving backward. The presence of the boy was not discovered by the engineer in time to avoid the infliction of the injury. The court said, that whether the boy was a trespasser was a question of fact for the jury; that while the tracks are a warning to the traveler of railway movements liable to be met, the highway crossing is likewise notice to the operators of engines or cars that travelers upon the highways are to be expected, and that care is exacted commensurate with such knowledge, and that,
“If the plaintiff was unmistakably attempting to cross the tracks upon the street crossing, and his deviation was accidental, as stated in the direct testimony, he was within the*416 benefits of such crossing rule; for the exercise of reasonable care in the movement of the train, measured by the conditions which were either known or within the observation of the engineer and trainmen, and thus unaffected by the rule as to trespassers.”
In the Ives case, the plaintiff’s intestate was killed by a railway train at a street crossing. One contention was that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence which was the proximate cause of the accident and exempted the defendant from liability. Speaking to this question, the court said:
“The contributory negligence of the party injured will not defeat the action if it be shown that the defendant might, by the exercise of reasonable care and prudence, have avoided the consequences of the injured party’s negligence.”
In the Bergmcm case, the plaintiff’s son, a minor eighteen years of age, was killed by a backing train, while walking on the railroad track in the city of St. Louis. The court said that, admitting the negligence of the boy, there should be a recovery “if the defendant either knew, or might by the exercise of ordinary diligence have known, of his dangerous position on the track in time to have prevented the accident.” The same rule was declared in the Klochenbrmk case, where the plaintiff, while driving his team upon a street, with two wheels of his wagon and one horse between the rails of a street car track, was struck by a car approaching from behind. In the Lloyd case, the plaintiff’s husband was run over and killed by the defendant’s train, while standing upon a public crossing on the side track at a station talking with an acquaintance, and a like rule was declared. The subject is exhaustively considered and the authorities reviewed in Southern R. Co. v. Bailey, supra. As a result of such analysis, the court said:
“If, however, -it appears that those in control of a train, in the discharge of their admitted duty to keep a reasonable outlook, discover, or should have discovered, a person upon the track, and there be superadded any fact or circumstance*417 brought home to their knowledge, sufficient to put a reasonable man upon his guard, that the person upon the track pays no heed to his danger and will take no step to secure his own safety, then the situation changes and the negligence of the person injured becomes the remote cause or mere condition of the accident, and the negligence of the railroad company the proximate cause, and there may be a recovery.”
The engineer testified that he stopped the train, after seeing the respondent, in a distance of 1,000 feet, and that he could have made an emergency stop in 700 or 900 feet. The locomotive engineers who testified for the respondent said that the particular train could have been stopped in an emergency in a distance of 600 feet. The engineer had a right to exercise his best judgment as to whether the conditions which confronted him demanded an emergency stop (his first and highest duty being owed to the passengers), and the appellant could not be held liable for an error of judgment made under such circumstances. We place the liability upon the ground that (as the court found) the respondent, while running down the “straight track,” was in plain view of the engineer, in the rays of the headlight, for at least 1,000 feet before the engine passed him. This being true, if the engineer had been keeping a proper lookout— and all the appellant’s expert witnesses testified that all prudent engineers keep a constant lookout ahead — he would have seen the respondent and would have seen his signals, and in view of the lateness of the hour and the proximity of the highway crossing, it was his duty to heed the signals. We have found no case involving facts similar to those present in this case, but we think the case readily accommodates itself to the principles announced in the authorities which we have reviewed.
The cases cited by the appellant may be divided into three principal classes. In the first class, the negligence of the injured party had not ceased, but continued up to the point
In the second class, the person or property injured was trespassing upon the defendant’s right of way at a point without a public highway. Lake Erie & W. R. Co. v. Weisel, 55 Ohio St. 155, 44 N. E. 923; Dull v. Cleveland, C. C. & St. L. R. Co., 21 Ind. App. 571, 52 N. E. 1013; Camden, G. & W. R. Co. v. Young, 60 N. J. L. 193, 37 Atl. 1013; San Antonio Traction Co. v. Kelleher, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 421, 107 S. W. 64; Hoffman v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 24 Mo. App. 546; Dotta v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 36 Wash. 506, 79 Pac. 32; Matson v. Port Townsend Southern R. Co., 9 Wash. 449, 37 Pac. 305; Reynolds v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 22 Wash. 165, 60 Pac. 120; Hamlin v. Columbia & Puget Sound R. Co., 37 Wash. 448, 79 Pac. 991; Shaw v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 104 Mo. 648, 16 S. W. 832; Eastern Kentucky R. Co. v. Powell, 17 Ky. Law 1051, 33 S. W. 629.
In the third class,, the plaintiff, being upon the defendant’s premises without an invitation either express or implied, stepped into an unguarded post hole, and was held to have been a trespasser. West v. Shaw, 61 Wash. 227, 112 Pac. 243. In these cases it was held that the defendant owed no duty to the plaintiff until his peril was discovered.
We think the judgment is right, and it is affirmed.
Mount, C. J., Crow, Parker, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.