Court Opinion

ID: 6543984
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:18:04.751535+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:54.904717
License: Public Domain

Bunn, C. J. This is an action for damages for negligently killing plaintiff’s intestate — First, for the benefit of the estate; and, second, for, the benefit of the widow and next of kin of the deceased. The verdict of the jury was for the defendant company on the first count, but for the plaintiff on the second count in the sum of $1,500. On the first count the damages were laid in the complaint at $5,000, and on the second count at $10,000. The testimony shows that on the first of March, 1894, one of defendant company’s trains was being run northward on the Bald Knob branch of the Iron Mountain railroad, and, on approaching the town and station of Wynne, struck, ran over, and instantly killed plaintiff’s intestate, Walters, while he was approaching the train on the track. C. C. Cradock, at the time of the accident fireman on the engine, as a witness for plaintiff, testified, in substance, that at the lower end of the railway yards at Wynne there was a sign-post, marked ‘Switch Limits. Slow.; This was reached by the engine about 300 feet before the engine struck the deceased, which occurred about one-half mile before reaching the station at Wynne. When the engine passed that post, it was running at the rate of about twenty miles per hour, and when it struck deceased it was running at the rate of fifteen or eighteen miles per hour, and was evidently slowing up at the time of the accident. Witness saw Walters walking on the track directly towards the engine, and the engineer saw him about the same time. He was about 200 or 300 yards away when they first saw him, but was 50 or 60 yards from them when, by his staggering, they saw that he was drunk. Previously the engineer had sounded the whistle at the limit post, giving it a long sound, and, we infer, began to slow up. When they saw the man was apparently drunk, the engineer at once sounded the whistle four or five times, and put on the brakes. Witness, continuing, states: “He [the engineer] commenced that whistling when he was, I guess, 50 or 60 yards from the man. I guess the man could have got off in the 50 or 60 yards. He could have got off the track on either side. About two steps would have taken him off. With the brake lever the engineer threw the brake on. This as soon as he saw he was intoxicated, — just instantly. I do not think the engineer could have done anything else to avoid the accident. I could not tell which way the man was looking, but think he was looking down. Our train made a kind of rumbling noise. I did not know this man was drunk until I saw him stagger, as I have said.” This witness was substantially supported by the others. The evidence in support of the charge of negligence of the railroad employees in charge of the train is, to say the most of it, of the most unsatisfactory character, and, to some of us at least, it is not exactly clear; but, with proper instructions, the jury might not have reached a different verdict. The first instruction given at the instance of the plaintiff applies solely to the first count, which, by the verdict and judgment of the court, is eliminated from this controversy. The second has reference to the measure of damages under the second count only, and it is not necessary to consider it here. The third is a copy of section 6207 of Sand. & H. Dig., on the subject of keeping a constant lookout, which, from the inicontroverted testimony in this case, was perhaps needless, if not abstract and misleading; and, seemingly to cure any errors in giving it, the court, on its own motion, gave the following, also over the objection of the defendant: “The law makes it the duty of all persons running trains in this state upon any railroad to keep a constant lookout for persons and property upon the tract of any and all railroads; and, if any person or property shall be killed or injured by the neglect of any employees of any railroad to keep such lookout, the company owning and operating any such railroad shall be liable and responsible to the person injured for all damages resulting from neglect to keep such lookout. This law does not apply where adult persons go upon a railroad track, where they have' no right to be, and carelessly allow a train to strike them; but, if you find from the evidence that the deceased, G. L. Walters, was so badly intoxicated as to be insensible of danger, and that the employees of the defendant in charge of the train that struck and killed said Walters failed to observe the above rule of law by keeping a constant lookout, and that, if they had kept such lookout, they could have discovered said Walters’ insensible condition in time to prevent injuring him, you will find for plaintiff.” In saying that the lookout statute “does not apply when adult persons go upon a railroad where they have no right to be, and carelessly allow a train to strike them,” the trial court did so, apparently, in recognition of the fact that this court has said in St. Louis, etc., R. Co. v. Leathers, 62 Ark. 235, and other cases, that the recent lookout statute does not do away with the defense of contributory negligence. But, in what follows, the court destroys or confuses all that it said in this statement. In the first place, the latter part of the instruction gives to a trespasser who is drunk an immunity from the charge of contributory negligence which a sober person would not enjoy; and in the same connection the court tells the jury that they might find from the evidence that if the trainmen had kept a constant lookout, as required by statute, they could have discovered Walters’ intoxicated condition in time to prevent injuring him. That the trainmen kept the constant lookout in this case goes without controversy, unless all testimony is to be arbitrarily disbelieved. That it necessarily follows from the keeping of such loookout that the trainmen could have discovered the intoxicated condition of the deceased is not law, nor do the facts in this case warrant such a conclusion. Before this part of the instruction should have been given, there should have been something in the evidence going to show some conduct or movement on the part of the deceased not usual in a person of sound mind and in a normal condition, or some circumstance showing that the condition of the deceased should have been known in time for the trainmen to avoid the injury, before the act-of staggering, of which the trainmen .speak as the first'indication they saw of the drunkenness of the deceased; for the undisputed evidence is that as soon as they saw this “staggering” they immediately applied the brakes, blew the whistle (which had just ceased to blow for the station), and did everything they could to avoid the accident. The trainmen testify that they saw the deceased walking on the track approaching them some 200 or 300 yards ahead. Considering the time of day, — about dusk, — when the engine headlight had already been lighted for the night’s run, this distance was sufficiently great to indicate that the proper lookout was being kept, and certainly to show that deceased could and would have got off in time had he been in proper condition; and this they had a right reasonably to expect him to do at any time before they saw his condition, especially as the whistle for the station was sounded, as we take it, between the time they first saw him and when they observed that he was drunk, or appeared to be drunk. The trainmen say that, from the time they first saw the deceased, they saw nothing unusual in his conduct or movements until, at a certain point and at a certain time, they saw him apparently turn to get off the track, and then suddénly going back on the track “staggering,” and this indicated to them that, he was intoxicated, or something unusual was the matter with him, and, being so impressed, they undertook to stop the train, as stated. In St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Leathers, 62 Ark. 238, in approval of the doctrine of Johnson v. Stewart, ib. 164, this court said: “We adhere to the ruling in that ease respecting the effect of the statute upon the doctrine of contributory negligence. In our opinion, it makes the failure to keep a constant lookout, by tbe employees of a railroad company, negligence, and puts tbe burden upon tbe railroad company to establish the fact that it kept such lookout. This is the extent of the change made in the law by statute, which, in our opinion, does not, in such case as this, abrogate the doctrine of contributory negligence.” One of the doctrines not abrogated by the “lookout statute” is thus enumerated in St. L., I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Wilkerson, 46 Ark. 513: “If the employees of a railroad company in charge of its train see a man walking upon the track at a distance ahead sufficient to enable him to get out of the way before the train reaches him, and are not aware that he is deaf or insane, or from some other cause insensible of danger, or unable to get out of the way, they have a right to rely on human experience, and to presume that he will act upon the principles of common sense and motive of self-preservation common to mankind in general, and will get out of the way, and to go on without checking the speed of the train until they see he is not likely to get out of the way, when it would become their duty to give extra alarm by bell or whistle, and if that is not heeded, and it becomes apparent that he will not get out of the way, then, as a last resort, to check its speed, or stop the train, if possible, in time to 'avoid disaster. If, however, the man seen upon the track is known to be, or from his appearance gives them good reason to believe that he is, insane, or badly intoxicated, or otherwise insensible of danger, or unable to avoid it, they have no right to presume that he will get out of the way, but should act upon the hypothesis that he might not or would not, and they should use a proper degree of care to to avoid injuring or killing him. Failing in this, the railroad company would be responsible for damages if, by the use of such care, after becoming aware of his negligence, they could have avoided injuring him.” In other words, this is the old doctrine, applied to the particular state of facts, that,, while a railroad company owes no duty to a trespasser on its track, yet, after becoming aware of the trespasser’s negligence and danger, it is the duty of the trainmen to do everything reasonably in their power to prevent injury. And, in treating of the phase of case where the insensibility to. danger is produced by intoxication, in the same case, this court said: “Lee had no legal right to be on that part of the railroad track of appellant where he was walking at the time he was killed.- It was not a public crossing, and was no part of a public highway. It was made solely for the running of the cars and and train of appellant, and the fact that persons did walk upon it, however frequently, did not change its character, and convert it into a highway for footmen. Being on the private property of appellant, he was where he should not have been, and was bound to use every precaution, every diligence, every care, against any danger which might have happened to him there.” “This was his duty. The fact that he was drunk did not excuse one [him] for a failure to exercise the measime of care and prudence which is due from a sober man under the same circumstances. Men must be content, especially when they are trespassers, to enjoy the pleasures of intoxication cum periculis. When they make themselves drunk, and in that condition wander upon a railroad track, and sustain an injury, they will not be héard to plead their intoxication as an answer to the charge of negligence, or as a reason why the railroad company should be held responsible to them for damages.” Had this man been sober, and not been discovered to be drunk, the defense of contributory negligence would have been without controversy, under the circumstances; and so it is that the testimony of the trainmen at last, to the effect that they believed the deceased was intoxicated, is all that justifies a discussion of the case. That being so, the only question of controverted fact was whether or not the trainmen saw his drunkenness in time to save the deceased by the use of proper effort and exertion. The proposition that they might have seen his condition before they did is not an established fact in the case, because there is no proof of prior indication of drunkenness, and no circumstances showing the condition of deceased might have been discovered sooner, and it is not a question of law, for it was stated thus by this court in Johnson v. Stewart, 62 Ark. 164: “But he seems to have overlooked the fact that the use of the words ‘or by reasonable diligence might have been discovered’ in the instruction asked by plaintiff in that case, and which are similar .to the modifications added by the court to the third request of appellant in this case, added a qualification so important and far-reaching as to even overturn the very doctrine of contributory negligence, which he was announcing; for it must be seen that, if this principle be sound, it sweeps away every duty and obligation of the plaintiff to exercise ordinary care for the protection of himself and property. He may be reckless of danger, and heedless of consequences, either deliberately or carelessly putting himself or property in front of moving trains; and yet, if it can be shown, in case of injury, that it might not have happened if the defendant had exercised ordinary care to discover the situation, the plaintiff may still recover. In other words, it matters not how careless or reckless the plaintiff may be in contributing to his own hurt, the defendant, nevertheless, is liable if he has also been negligent. This would be erroneous and unjust. The true rule, which no amount of amplification can simplify, is that whenever the negligence of the plaintiff contributes proximately to cause the injury of which he complains, the defendant is not liable.” In this case, and under the particular facts of it, there is no necessity of going to the extent of either of the decisions we have just quoted. All that is necessary to say is that, while the law puts the burden upon the railroad company of showing in any case that a constant lookout was kept, yet when that is shown to have been done, and when it is also shown that the plaintiff has been guilty of contributory negligence, it does not follow that the burden is any further upon the defendant. In other words, applying the rule to this case, where it is shown that the plaintiff was intoxicated, there is no burden on defendant to show when its servants discovered his condition, or under what state of facts they might have discovered it. In this case there is no proof of circumstances from which the trainmen should have seen deceased's drunken condition, before they claim to have done so, and the jury had no right to assume the existence of any such circumstances; and still less was it right in the court to instruct them, in effect, that they could arbitrarily say that the trainmen might have seen the drunkenness of deceased sooner, by the exercise of due care, for no amount of care could discover indications of drunkenness where none are shown to have appeared, or may not have appeared. The judgment is reversed for the errors in the instruction named, and the cause remanded for a new hearing not inconsistent herewith.