102 P. 635 | Utah | 1909
(After stating the facts as above.)
Tbe general duty which the appellant owed tbe traveling public — who for years bad been permitted, without objection, to use tbe yards in question; as a thoroughfare — to exercise reasonable care in operating its trains and locomotives, to avoid injury toi persons who might pass along or over its yards, and tbe duty of such persons to look out for their own safety when using tbe yards as a thoroughfare, were fully discussed, and tbe rights and reciprocal duties of appellant and the' deceased, under tbe facts and circumstances of this-case, were determined by tbe former opinion.of this court. (Teakle v. Railroad Co., 32 Utah 276, 90 Pac. 402, 10 L. R. A. [N. S.] 486.) In tbe course of tbe opinion it is said:“There is much reason for tbe distinction that tbe railroad company should not be held liable in case of an1 actual or conscious trespasser until bis position of danger is discovered,, and should be held liable in case of one not a trespasser ex
It being conceded that the evidence given at the first trial was substantially the same as that produced at the last trial, the decision of this court of the questions presented on the former appeal became and is the law of the 1 case. (Potter v. Ajax Min. Co., 22 Utah 277, 61 Pac. 999; 2 Spelling, New Tr. & App. section 691; 5' Words and Phrases, 4024; 2 Ency. PI. and Pr. 373.) The case on this appeal is therefore practically narrowed down to two propositions. The first involves the question as to whether or not the evidence is sufficient to support a finding by the jury that Tealde, notwithstanding the injuries he received by being struck by the train in the first instance and run over by the forward truck of the foremost car, would have survived if the train had been stopped before he was hit by the engine ? And the second involves the question as to whether the operatives of the train, notwithstanding the negligence of the deceased in going upon the track withorit looking or listening for the cars, could, by the exercise of such care and diligence as a reasonably careful and prudent person would have exercised under like conditions and circumstances, have discovered the deceased’s position of peril after he was struck and thrown! under the cars and his arm severed from his body, in time to have stopped the train and saved his life ? In other words, stated in a more, condensed form, the case as now presented involves the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to show: (1) Whether there was any continuing or intervening negligence on the part of the train operatives after the deceased was struck by the train and rendered helpless; (2) whether the proximate
The case involves, and in fact was tried by the lower court upon, the “last clear chance” doctrine. 'Counsel for respondent, in their printed brief, have tersely, and, as we think, correctly, stated the case as presented by this appeal, as follows: “It has been decided, and it is conceded, that deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, and that no recovery can be had for the loss of his arm; also, that no recovery cam be had for his death, except upon the ground of (appellant’s) negligence continuing and intervening after the effect of his contributory negligence had been spent, and without which (continuing and intervening) negligence” the life of the deceased could have been saved. When1 respondent rested her ease, appellant moved the court for a nonsuit on the ground that the evidence failed to bring the case within the “last clear chance” doctrine, “not having shown or tended to show that the deceased was alive after the results of his contributory negligence,” and, further, that “there is no evidence that Teakle was not killed when struck, thrown upon the ground, and passed over by the first trucks of the first car.” The order of the court overruling the motion is assigned as error. At the close of the case appellant requested the court to peremptorily instruct the jury to return a verdict in its favor. The refusal' of the court to thus direct a verdict is also assigned as error. As both of these assignments of error relate solely to the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to justify a verdict against appellant, they will be considered together. The contention of appellant with respect to the question presented by these assignments is clearly set forth by its counsel, in their brief, as follows: “She (respondent) has not sustained the burden of proof that was upon her to show that the failure to stop the train after deceased was struck was the proximate cause of his death, and this is so because there is no' evidence in the record that can be pointed out tending to show that Teakle would
John Elkins, a witness for plaintiff, who was in the yards south of Teakle when the accident occurred, testified, in part, as follows: “I heard some one yell and turned around just in time to see Mr. Teakle step on the track and the train push him over. I stepped back even with where he was. I came up on the west side of the train and stood nearly opposite where he was lying. I saw the north trucks of the first car pass over him, though they did not touch him that I could see. They did not move him. While his left aim was-stretched out, the right was kind of semicireled in' front of his head. His head was face down. I saw him move. When I reached there he was apparently alive. His head was not injured that I could see, nior his clothes disarranged. The wheel had run over his left arm between the elbow and wrist. After I got there his position did not change at all until the engine or fire box struck him — only the wheel of the first car that passed over him interfered with him. The second car didn’t interfere with him at all that I could see, nor did the engine tender. I was there looking at him. If it had' disturbed him I would have seen.” On cross-examination he testified that he was between thirty and forty feet from Teakle when he was struck, and was about three or four feet west of the track on which the accident occurred. “As the ear approached I would he looking right into' the end of it. . As I ran north I didn’t take my eyes off Teakle. The front part of the train pushed Teakle over, and the wheel caught his arm. No other part of the train struck him until the firebox hit him. . . . He threw out his hand evidently to protect himself or get hold of something. . . . No other part of the train struck him until the fire box hit him. . .
On this point the witness Hayburn testified: “I saw Tea-kle struck. He was bit by the back of the car, and it pushed him over He fell down. When I reached him the center of the first car was passing over him. He was lying face down, with bis right arm in front of bis face. His left arm was on the rail. His bat was off, and bis scalp and bead were not bruised at all, or cut. His clothes were not damaged, and there was no blood other than at the point where the wheel ran over bis arm. ... I watched him there till the train passed over him up to the fire box. Hp1 to the time the fire box struck him he remained in the same condition in which I first saw him after falling. . . . Teakle got through all right without the brake beam hitting him. When the fire box struck him, it rolled him over and mangled him up. After the train passed over him, he lay just a few yards south of the point where the fire box struck him with his head to the north. Before the fire box struck him, it was pointing south.”
Earl Gill, another witness for plaintiff testified: “He
The foregoing is practically all the evidence introduced by respondent in support of her theory that the only serious injury received by Tealde, when the first truck of the foremost ear passed over him, was the loss of his
The court, among other things, instructed the jury, as follows: “(4) In this case the court instructs you that under the evidence of the plaintiff’s own witnesses the deceased, Thomas W. Teakle, in stepping upon' the railroad track in front of an approaching car in the manner in which plaintiffs witnesses testified that the deceased stepped upon the track, was himself guilty of negligence,
It is contended that under these instructions the jury . might very properly have found the issues in favor of plaintiff on account of defendant’s negligence prior to the time that Teakle was first struck and knocked down by the train. We do not think the instructions are open to this objection. Not only did the court say to the jury in these instructions that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence when he stepped upon the track in front of the moving train, and that no recovery could be had for injuries sustained by him from his first impact with the train; but the court, in the ninth instruction charged the jury that: “The undisputed evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses shows that he stepped upon such trade in front of the moving train, when but to look or otherwise use ordinary care on his part would have disclosed to him the approach of the train. The court further instructs you that such negligence on the part of the deceased was a concurring and contributing cause of the collision and bars all right of recovery for whatever injury proximately resulted from such collision.” In the sixteenth instruction the jury were told that: “If the deceased was killed when he was first struck by the train, the plaintiff could not recover.” In the eighteenth instruction the court charged: “You are further instructed that it was the duty of the deceased, Thomas W. Teakle, before attempting to cross or walk upon the railroad track upon which he was injured, to look and listen to ascertain the presence of any locomotive or train of cars that might be approaching thereon; and, if you believe from the evidence that
It will thus be seen that the court clearly and repeatedly charged the jury that the deceased ini stepping upon the track in front of the train was guilty of negligence, and that such negligence was a contributing and concurring cause of the collision, and that nn recovery could be had for any injury which proximately resulted from such collision; also, that the burden was upon plaintiff to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that defendant was guilty of negligence continuing or intervening after the negligence of deceased, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of his death. This assignment is without merit, as the instructions are not susceptible of the construction which counsel suggest the jury might have given them.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to respondent.