80 Cal. 521 | Cal. | 1889
Lead Opinion
Action for damages for personal injuries; verdict and judgment for plaintiff; defendant appeals.
The defendant is a corporation owning and operating a wharf extending into the bay of San Diego, at which vessels land. Along the length of the wharf was a railroad track which was used for the purpose of transporting freight to the shore. On one side of this track was a space about seven feet, which was used as a passageway for travelers along the wharf. On this side was a landing for small boats, with steps going down to the water, and a boat-house which was rented by the defendant to a man who kept boats for hire. On the other side was a space of about thirteen inches between the outer rail and the edge of the wharf. On this side, about three hundred yards from the shore, was a raft moored to the wharf. There was some staging there, with steps down to the raft. The plaintiff must have been familiar with the general features of the place, for he testifies that he had “been going there for about three years.”
According to the plaintiff’s story, he was engaged for ten or fifteen minutes in trying to push the boat out from the wharf. While so engaged, the train came backing out toward the end of the wharf at the rate of about “six or eight” miles an hour. When about forty yards from the boat, the lookout on the end of the train saw the mast and the plaintiff, and signaled the engineer to stop. The latter did not see the signal as soon as he ought to have done. And although when he did see it, he tried to stop, he was not able to do so before the place of danger was reached. The edge of the cars caught the mast and broke it in two. The plaintiff was struck by the mast, thrown against a cross-piece or “cap-head,” on which the floor of the wharf rested, knocked overboard, and seriously injured.
The view between the place of the accident and the starting-point of the train was unobstructed. In this regard the plaintiff testified as follows: “ Between me
If he looked, he saw, and having age and faculties to understand the dangers, is charged with a knowledge of them, and was bound to act upon that knowledge, as a prudent and cautious man would under the circumstances.”
In the case before us it may be conceded, for the pur
The plaintiff should have been nonsuited on his own statement. And, to say the least, his case was not strengthened by the evidence introduced by the defendant. In a case like this the fact that the jury viewed the locality makes no difference.
We therefore advise that the judgment and order denying a new trial be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Gibson, C., and Belcher, C. C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Works, J., did not participate in the decision of the above cause.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. At the time defendant’s motion for a nonsuit was submitted, it had
Except in so far as that and previous visits to the pier might tend to prove knowledge on his part of the manner in which the pier and track were constructed, I think that after he was once fairly in the boat his subsequent conduct must be viewed precisely as if he had been sailing on the bay, and by accident or unskillfulness had been carried into the position in which defendant’s train found him. The question then is, whether he knew or had reason to suppose that defendant’s track had been so laid that its cars moving upon the rails would project beyond the edge of the wharf so as to come in contact with the mast of his boat. As to this he testified that he did not know that the track was so laid, and it appears to me he had no reasonable grounds to suppose so.
The wharf in question extends from the shore to the ship-channel, a distance of about twelve hundred feet
For these reasons I cannot say that the superior court erred in denying the motion for a nonsuit.