Court Opinion

ID: 7890419
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:48:09.060831+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:31:53.624348
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Allen, J.
: It is strenuously urged by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to find for the defendant, and that there can be no recovery under the facts disclosed by the testimony in this case. The main objections urged are, that the evidence clearly disclosed the fact that the railroad on which the plaintiff was injured was not operated by the defendant company at the time of the injury, but was, in fact, operated by the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company; and that the injury to the plaintiff was due solely to Ms own negligence. As to the first of these claims, it must be conceded that the evidence tending tó show that the railroad was operated by the defendant company was very slight, and that there was a great deal of testimony to the effect that the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific took possession of and operated the *657road on or about tlie 1st of April, 1889, and the plaintiff’s injury appears to have been received on the 22d of that month. Whatever weight we might be willing to give to it if the matter were submitted to us as a question of fact, we yet think there was some slight evidence tending to support the finding of the jury in that particular. Nor can we declare, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff’s injury was due' to his own culpable negligence. It is true that a boy of ordinary intelligence, nearly 15 years old, cannot be excused from using such care and prudence as a boy of that age would ordinarily exercise in order to avoid danger. Courts will not presume boys of that age to be incapable of providing for their own safety. But in this case it appears from the testimony that the baggageman to whom he delivered the railroad mail was grossly abusive, and that the violent and profane language the baggageman used caused him to lose for the instant his presence of mind, and that while he was confused he stepped into the place of danger where he received Ms injury. It was for the jury to say, under this testimony and all' the other evidence in the case, whether an unwarranted act of the baggageman did excuse the plaintiff’s want of care in stepping in front of the approaching train, by depriving him for the time being of his capacity to act with ordinary prudence. This judgment, however, must be reversed and a new trial ordered because of very serious errors in the instructions given by the court. The sixth instruction is to the effect that, if the injury was caused by the negligence of the defendant, and the plaintiff was also guilty of some slight degree of negligence, this would not alone prevent a recovery, provided the jury further believe that the act of the defendant which caused the injury *658was done after discovering the plaintiff’s negligence, and the defendant could have avoided the injury by the exercise of reasonable' care. The engineer in charge of the engine which caused the injury testified that the first he saw of the boy was when he made the first step, and was about to make the.second step when the engine struck him ; that, in approaching the station, he applied the air, and seeing that he was going to stop too quick, he released the air and put his head out of the window to recognize the other train, according to the rule on the road, and that by the time he took his head in again he saw the boy, and when he stopped the boy was at the hind end of the tender.
It is claimed that it was the duty of the engineer, when going into a station, to look out for the safety of persons who had a right to be on and about the tracks, and to be constantly on the alert’to avoid injury to them, and that by turning his attention to the other train the engineer neglected the duty he owed the plaintiff to look out for his safety. The only negligence charged against the engineer • in the petition is in failing to ring the bell, sound the whistle, or give any other signal of the approach of the train. This instruction would authorize a recovery if the jury believed that the plaintiff negligently stepped in front of the approaching train, but that, after he had done so, the engineer might, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, have avoided Injury to him. If negligence in this respect was relied on, it ought to have been charged in the petition.'
The objections to the tenth, eleventh and twelfth instructions are still more serious. The tenth instruction is in effect that if the baggage-master, by accosting the plaintiff in an angry manner, caused *659him to be confused, so that his attention was taken off the coming train, and by reason of his being disconcerted he was injured, the company is liable for the injury. This instruction wholly excludes the consideration of any question of negligence, and directs the jury to find against the defendant if the baggageman, by his language, did in fact confuse the plaintiff, and if his being so confused in fact caused his injury. It is exceedingly difficult to see how a recovery can be based solely on the conduct of the baggage-master. While it is, of course, reprehensible for him to have cursed a boy of the age of the plaintiff, it does not necessarily follow that he might have reasonably anticipated that by so doing the boy would altogether lose his self-control and step in front of the approaching train. The conduct and language of the baggage-master might properly be proven for the purpose of relieving the plaintiff from the charge of contributory negligence, but it would not render the company liable for the injury unless such conduct might reasonably be expected to cause the plaintiff to act as he did, and thereby to induce the injury. It is only where the act of a servant might reasonably be expected to produce the injury that in fact results that the master Can be held to answer in damages.
The eleventh and twelfth instructions declare it to have been the duty of the station-agent, Collins, after delivering the mail to the plaintiff to be carried to the car, to protect him from all dangers that might be reasonably apprehended, and that the company was liable for any failure to so protect him. By these instructions the liability was imposed on the defendant,not for negligently sending the plaintiff into a place of danger, but for failing to protect him from the dangers which surrounded him. If it were conceded that *660the plaintiff went into a place of danger where he had no right, and that liability -was incurred by the defendant by reason of the act of its agent in sending him there, the measure of the defendant’s liability, as declared by the instructions, would be an extreme one, substantially the same as that disapproved by this court in the case of A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Winston, ante, p. 456, 43 Pac. Rep. 777. But the plaintiff does not claim that he was a trespasser, nor that he went to the place of danger solely because of the direction given him by the agent, Collins. His own testimony shows that he had started to mail letters given him by Licht,- and it is claimed by counsel here, and we think justly so, that he had a right to go to the car in which the railway post-office was kept for the purpose of mailing the letters intrusted to him ; that he was not a trespasser ; and that, though in a place of some danger, it was a place where, by the exercise of reasonable prudence on his part and of proper care on the part of those in charge of the trains, he might do his errand and return in safety. It is difficult to perceive how the act of the agent, Collins, in calling him back to give him other letters to mail radically changed his situation, and certainly it did not render the company an insurer of his safety. It is very difficult to see how Collins could have protected the boy against the rude language of the baggage-master, or how he could have caused the engineer of the west-bound train to ring the bell, sound the whistle, or keep a close watch in front of his engine. None of the agencies which produced the plaintiff’s injury were under the control of Collins, nor is it pointed out how it would have been possible for him to have protected the plaintiff. His negligence, if negligence it was, was in halting the boy while performing the mission he had first undertaken, *661and in imposing on liim the further task of delivering railroad letters to the baggage-master. Whether in doing this he failed to act as a person of ordinary prudence would have acted under like circumstances was a question which might have been submitted to the jury; but no liability could be imposed on the defendant company by reason of his doing so, unless his acts were the direct and proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, and only this question, so far as imposing liability on the defendant company because of the acts of the agent, Collins, could properly be submitted to the jury.
Various other criticisms are made on the instructions. We think it might have been well for the court to have explained to the jury just what negligence was imputed to the defendant, but we find nothing in the other criticisms requiring special mention.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.
All the Justices concurring.