116 F. 324 | 9th Cir. | 1902
(after stating the facts as above). The errors assigned are the sustaining of the demurrer to the affirmative defense contained in the answer, the admission of certain testimony at the trial, and the giving of certain instructions to the j'ury, and refusing to give certain other instructions. The first question, then, for consideration is, what effect, if any, did the contract between the deceased and the railway company have upon the plaintiffs’ right of action?
It will be observed that the terms of the contract provided for the exemption of the railroad company from liability “for any injury to the person, or for any loss or damage to the property,” of the passenger using the free ticket, caused by the negligence of agents or otherwise. Can this language be construed to relieve the rail
What, then, is the statutory liability of the defendant herein to the representatives of the deceased, if liable at all? By the statute of Idaho, in which state the deceased met with the fatal accident, action for death by wrongful act or neglect is permitted, as follows:
“When the death of a person, not being a minor, is caused, by the wrongful act or neglect of another, his heirs or personal representatives may maintain an action for damages against the person causing the death; or, if such person be employed by another person who is responsible for his conduct, then, also, against such other person. In every action under this and the preceding section, such damages may be given as, under all the circumstances of the case, may be just.” Rev. St. Idaho, § 4100.
And by the statute of Washington, in which state this action was brought, it is provided that:
“When the death of a person is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of .another, his heirs or personal representatives may maintain an action for damages against the person causing the death. * * * In every such action the jury may give such damages, pecuniary or exemplary, as, under all the circumstances of the case, may to them seem just.” 2 Ballinger’s Ann. Codes & St. Wash. § 4828.
The action for damages against a party causing the death of another by wrongful act or neglect had its origin in Eord Campbell’s Act, 9 & 10 Viet., and that act has served as a model for much of the statutory enactment in this country upon the subject. The principal object of the act and the legislation following it was to meet a •supposed defect in the common-law rule that any right of action
The statutes have been variously held to be penal and remedial, and accordingly given strict and liberal constructions. But under the most liberal interpretation implied provisions cannot be introduced into a statute where no ambiguity appears. The intention of the lawmakers is to be determined from the words they employ; and, where statutes have been enacted by certain states omitting provisions which occur in similar statutes in other states, courts have no right to presume that such omission was negligent or unintentional, especially where the language is clear and conclusive without such clauses. In such cases there is nothing to construe. Language bearing a plain import needs no extended construction. In the statutes of both Idaho and Washington the clause limiting the right of action to circumstances which would have permitted the deceased to sue is entirely omitted, and nothing appears elsewhere in the statutes to. warrant its insertion by implication. The omission must therefore be considered as unintentional, and the legislative will to be completely expressed without such limiting provision. The right of action given by such statutes is to the heirs or personal representatives of a person killed by the wrongful act of another, not for the injuries or damages caused to the deceased, but for the injuries and damages caused to his heirs or representatives by reason of the loss of the deceased. It cannot be dependent upon the right of the deceased to siich an action if living, for it does not come into existence until his death by the wrongful act of another. It then springs into existence, by virtue of the statute, in the heirs of personal representatives, purely and simply because they have been damaged by the wrongful or negligent act of another, the relationship existing between the deceased and the party causing the death having no bearing upon the right of action other than as a circumstance to be considered in determining the degree of negligence. In the case of Munro v. Reclamation Co., 84 Cal. 515, 24 Pac. 303, 18 Am. St. Rep 248, the supreme court of California, in construing a similar statute to those in controversy herein, held
Under the statutes of both Idaho and Washington, then, the plaintiffs had a right of action against the defendant railroad company for the just damages to them resulting from the death of the said Jay H. Adams, if his death was caused by the negligence of the railroad company; and this right of action was in no way dependent upon any right existing in the deceased before his death, or which might have accrued to him had he survived.
The plaintiffs claim that the defendant was negligent (1) in running a nonvestibuled car as a part of the train, and (2) in running the train with too great rapidity around a curve in the track. Evidence was introduced in support of these contentions showing that the train which the deceased boarded at the station of Hope was some 3 hours late; that the distance between Hope and the station of Sand Point is 16 miles; that the ordinary schedule time for running between these stations was 35 minutes; that on the afternoon in question this run was made in 24 minutes. For the first half of this distance the track is practically on a level, but contains many curves; in fact, between the 3-mile post out of Hope and the 8-mile post the outline of the track forms a figure similar to three sides of a parallelogram, with the sharp corners cut off by rounding curves, and the general lines being sinuous instead of straight. The engineer in charge of the engine drawing the train on that day testified that in pulling out of Hope a speed of only 20-miles an hour was attained while passing through the yards, but at about one half mile west of Hope the speed was increased to about 35 miles an hour; that this speed was increased to 40 miles an hour, but was decreased at the Pack river trestle, a little beyond the 3-mile post, to perhaps 25 miles an hour. The trestle was about 7,100 feet long. The engineer testified that about 200 or 300 feet before leaving the trestle he started working steam again, and increased the speed .again to 35 miles an hour, maintaining this speed until reaching the third mile from the trestle, or about 7J^ miles from Hope, when the speed was again increased to about 45 miles an hour at the 10-mile post, in order to carry the train up a light grade there. From the top of the grade a speed of 60 miles an hour was gradually attained, and maintained until necessary to stop at the station of Sand Point. The body of Mr. Adams was found at a point about 1 y2 miles beyond the Pack river trestle, or about 6 miles west of Hope, where the sharpest curve of the track between Hope and Sand Point occurs. The air brakes were not used on
The railway mail clerk on the train at the time of the accident, and who had been running over that line for about eight months, testified that when the train had nearly passed over the Pack river trestle he noticed an unusual motion of the car,—such a lurching and swinging that he could not continue with his work, but, to use his own words, “did not do a thing only hold on to keep from being knocked around the car until I got to Sand Point.” He stated that the mail sacks piled against the side of the car fell down; that he observed the engine “talking for all she was worth”; and in his judgment the train attained a speed of about 50 miles an hour immediately after leaving the trestle, and that this speed was increased to 60 miles an hour within a mile and a half from the trestle, where the accident occurred.
The news agent, who had been running on that line for over two years, also testified to the unusually high speed of the train between Pack river trestle and Sand Point; that the shaking motion of the train over the crooked road there was so violent as to make him car sick, and he did not make his usual trip through the cars until after leaving Sand Point, finding it too difficult to stand in the aisles. He further stated that the brakeman told him they had orders to make .up a certain amount of time between Hope and Sand Point, and that the best thing he could do would be to sit down and hold onto the seat.
A merchant of Hope, a’ccustomed to making the trip over this road to Spokane about twice a month, and Mr. Gabbert, the gentleman who boarded the train with the deceased on that day, both testified to the unusual lurching of the car shortly after leaving the Pack river trestle, and the high rate of speed maintained by the train until reaching Sand Point.
The evidence of running a train at too great speed, and its permission by the railway company’s rules, is an element of consideration'in determining the question of negligence in a particular case (Railway Co. v. Dixon, 179 U. S. 131, 139, 21 Sup. Ct. 67, 45 L. Ed. 121); and it is of especial importance in this case in considering the advisability or necessity of providing vestibuled platforms over which passengers are permitted to pass while the cars are in motion, and whether, under the circumstances, the omission to make such provision is negligence on the part of the railroad .company. It has long been established that common carriers of. passengers are bound to exercise the utmost degree of care, diligence, and skill that is practically consistent with the mode of transportation adopted; and, while they are not required to employ every possible preventive which the highest scientific skill might suggest, the law requires such carriers to use the best precautions in known practical use to secure the safety of their passengers. Whether the carrier has done so or not is a question of fact, depending upon the peculiar circumstances of each case, which circumstances are
So, in the case at bar, the question whether the defendant railroad company, having announced to the public that it was running a completely vestibuled train, and by advertisement invited the public to patronize the dining car run by it as a part of its train, thereby permitting and in fact inviting the passengers to pass over the various platforms of intervening cars while the train was in motion, was negligent in not providing such platforms with such safeguards as to make passage thereover reasonably safe at all times, taking into consideration the fact that portions of the track to be passed over at a rapid speed contained sharp curves,—this question was necessarily one of fact, and therefore within the province of the jury, under proper instructions from the court. The instructions given by the trial court in'this regard were in accord with the established doctrine upon the duty of common carriers to passengers, and with the decision of the jury upon this question we have therefore nothing to do.
In Bronson v. Oakes, 76 Fed. 734, 22 C. C. A. 520, a passenger riding in the rear coach of a vestibuled train left the coach at night to go to the forward end of the train, and, to facilitate his return, left open the door of the sleeping coach in which he was riding. The night was dark, the vestibule was not lighted, and the train was running rapidly. On his return, in passing through the vestibule which led into the coach in which he was riding, he supposed a dim, reflected light from the windows of the sleeper was a light shining through the door of the coach which he had left open, and, proceeding as he supposed to enter the doorway of the coach, he walked through an outside vestibule door, which had been left open, fell from the train, and was seriously injured. The court held that the question of whether the railroad company was negligent or not rested with the jury, and in commenting upon this question said:
•‘The defendants were under no legal obligation to provide vestibuled trains for tbeir passengers, but, having done so, it was their duty to maintain them in a reasonably safe condition. Railway Co. v. Glover (Ga.) 18 S. E. 406, 414. The purpose of the vestibuled cars is to add to the comfort, convenience, and safety of passengers, more particularly while passing from one car to another. The presence of such an appliance on a train is a proclamation by the company to the passenger that it has provided him a safe means of passing from one car to another, and an invitation for him to use it as his convenience or necessity may require. Whether, having provided vestibuled cars for their passenger trains, it was negligence in the defendants to leave the vestibule connection between two cars without light, and the outside door of the vestibule open without a guardrail or other protection while the train was running rapidly on a dark night, is a question of fact for the jury to determine; and if, upon the facts set out in the complaint, they should find that it was negligence, no court could disturb their finding."
It is claimed by the defendant that'the deceased was in the habit of traveling upon these trains, and, having knowledge of the unvestibuled tourist sleeping car which invariably formed a part of the train, was guilty of contributory negligence in passing to and from
In Railroad Co. v. Powers, 149 U. S. 43, 13 Sup. Ct. 748, 37 L. Ed. 642, Mr. Justice Brewer, speaking for the court upon the question of contributory negligence, said:
“It Is well settled that, where there Is uncertainty as to the existence of either negligence or contributory negligence, the question is not one of law, but of fact, and to be settled by a jury; and this, whether the uncertainty arises from a conflict in the testimony, or because, the facts being undisputed, fair-minded men will draw different conclusions from them.”
The testimony admitted by the trial court over the objections of the defendant related to the circumstances showing the probable cause of death of Adams, and to the pecuniary loss sustained by the plaintiffs in his death. These objections do not, in our opinion, present any questions involving reversible error, and are not of a character to call for discussion.
The judgment is affirmed.