Court Opinion

ID: 7106678
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:21:45.191189+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:35.852649
License: Public Domain

Rothrock, J.
The evidence shows that in the month of October, 1891, the plaintiff, while walking" along the side of one of the defendant’s railroad tracks, - was struck by a moving car, and thrown down and injured. The car was moving in the same direction which the plaintiff was walking, and when it reached the place of the accident the plaintiff was so close to the.track that the car could not be pushed past him without: striking him. The main question in the case is,'did the • plaintiff show that he exercised the care which the law. requires,.to protect himself from injury? . Or, in other, words, did the evidence introduced by the plaintiff show ■. such a degree of care and caution as to.authorize the, jury to find that he was not chargeable with negligence which contributed to the injury for which he seeks to, recover? A proper determination of that question has, made it necessary to carefully read the evidence in the case. Appellant’s abstract purports to be an abstract of, all the evidence. Appellee filed an additional, abstract, and each party disputes the correctness of the abstract filed by the other. This has made it necessary to examine the transcript of the evidence, as taken down by the short hand reporter on the trial. In doing so we have practically discarded the abstracts. We will dispose of the case by a statement of facts which the evidence establishes beyond question, and which, in our opinion, authorizes the court to direct a verdict for the defendant. It is unnecessary to set out the testimony of the witnesses.
As has been stated, the plaintiff was injured while walking along the side of a railroad track in the defend-' ant’s switch yards. The accident occurred in what is ' known as a street, but which is occupied to such ah extent by the railroad tracks that there is no Other ' traffic along the street. It is not used for driving *48wagons along it, or for any other purpose, except that persons are accustomed to pass along the side of the track where plaintiff was walking when he was injured. There is evidence to the effect that there is from three to three and one-half feet on the side of the track which persons use as a sort of footpath. There is no bank or ditch, of any depth, at the outside of the path, which would prevent persons from going outside of the traveled path to avoid injury, if that were necessary. The plaintiff was walking abreast with another man, Who was on the outside, or furthest away from the track. They walked in this way for some distance, and approached a place where there was a junction with the track on which the car which came in contact with plaintiff was moving. The fact is there was a junction or connection of some nine or ten tracks near the place of the injury, on any one of which cars and engines W'ere accustomed to be moving, thus making it necessary for persons walking on or near the tracks to be on the lookout for moving cars. There was nothing to prevent the plaintiff from looking. He was in full possession of all ■Ms senses. It was broad daylight, and the view was unobstructed. There is nothing in the case, rising to the dignity of evidence, which shows that the plaintiff looked for an approaching oar. His traveling companion testified that he did not look, and that he did not observe that plaintiff looked. It is true that the1 plain tiffs testified that he “turned Ms head,” and that he “noticed” to see whether a car was approacMng. Considering all the facts attending the accident, if the plaintiff had squarely testified that he turned round and looked back over the track at the point of the junction, no jury would have been justified in believing or finding that he did. If he had looked he would have seen the approaching car, and the statement that he did look and did not see it is no more worthy of belief than *49if he had testified that it was not yet daylight on the thirty-first day of October, at about seven o’clock in the morning, — the time when the accident happened.
II.. ; There is but one other point necessary, to be considered. It is charged in the petition that the employes of the defendant, in managing the train'to which the car was attached, were negligent in not stopping the train when they discovered the plaintiff’s peril. The train by which the plaintiff was. injured came from another track, upon the track near which plaintiff wais walking; and the plaintiff testified that, after he struck the point of intersection, he walked probably the length of a rail and a half before he was struck. He was in no danger until he passed the point of intersection, and the evidence, shows, beyond' all question, that as sóón as the switchman saw that plaintiff was walking too near the track the cry of alarm was given, and the train was promptly stopped.
Without further elaboration, it is sufficient to say that this whole record, when carefully read and considered, shows a state of facts absolutely conclusive against a right of recovery. We need not cite authorities to sustain our conclusion. . It is a plain case of seeking a recovery when the undisputed facts and familiar rules of law stand in the way of reaching such a result. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.