Abbot v. Oregon Railroad

80 P. 1012, 46 Or. 549, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 75
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 P. 1012 (Abbot v. Oregon Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbot v. Oregon Railroad, 80 P. 1012, 46 Or. 549, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 75 (Or. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is contended by defendants’ counsel that the testimony introduced by plaintiff conclusively shows that the injury of which he complains was caused by his contributory negligence, and hence the court erred in overruling their motions for judgments of nonsuit, based on that ground. The legal principle insisted upon necessitates an examination of the bill of excep-' tions, which shows that the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co. is a corporation owning and operating a railroad from Portland east to Huntington, passing through the station of Biggs, situated on the. south bank of the Columbia River. The Columbia Southern Railway Co. is also a corporation owning and operating a railroad from Biggs south to Shaniko. The depot and tracks at Biggs are owned by the former company, but the cost of maintaining the station is borne, and the tracks and premises connected therewith are jointly used, by both in receiving and discharging passengers. The station building is placed east and [558]*558west between parallel tracks, the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co. using the lines of rails on the north side, of the depot, and the other company those on the south. This building is surrounded by a plank platform 16 feet wide on the north, 12 on the south, and 14 on the east and west. The land on which the depot stands slopes to the south, so that the north edge of the platform is level with the tracks of the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co., while the south edge is about five feet above the rails on that side, and the center of the west edge about six feet above the surface of the ground, which at that point is somewhat depressed. The Columbia Southern Railway Co., at the time of plaintiff’s injury, was operating daily trains only, but the other company was running night passenger trains — No. 6, going east, passing through Biggs at 12:22 midnight, and No. 3, going west, at 3:30 a. m. These trains were not scheduled to stop at that station, which was closed at night, and no light maintained at the depot, the passengers being accommodated by the day trains of both companies which stopped at that junction.

The plaintiff is 59 years old, has traveled extensively by rail, is engaged in buying wool on commission, and had been at Biggs 11 times prior to his injury, passing'in the daylight over a gang plank extending from the depot platform to the cars of -the Columbia Southern Railway Co. With other buyers, he was at Shaniko June 27, 1903, attending a saleof wool, which was not concluded until evening. As these dealers could'save a day’s .time if they could reach Biggs and take the night passenger trains of the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Go., they employed the other company to carry them by special train to that junction, the train dispatcher of the former company having telegraphed .that its night passenger train would stop at Biggs if the special train reached there in time. The train so chartered left Shaniko at 8:40 p. m., and reached the junction at IS :15 that night, the car in which the wool dealers rode being left on the south side of the depot, and near the west end thereof. A fe-tt minutes thereafter train No. 6 stopped at the north side of the depot, and the passengers from Shaniko, who were going-east, were escorted by a trainman of the Columbia Southern Railway Co., having a lantern, from its car, over the gang [559]*559plank and across the west end of the depot platform to the train of the other company. The plaintiff accompanied the departing passengers to their train, and immediately returned with the trainman to the car which he had left, intending to take passage for Portland when train No. 3 arrived. The car in which plaintiff was to ivait Avas well lighted, and provided with a suitable toilet room. He sat down, and tried to slumber, but on the way from Shaniko the passengers had freely indulged in smoking, and he Avas unable to sleep. Being weary from the. effects of his ride and fatigued from the strained position occasioned by sitting for several hours in an ordinary passenger ear, he rose, left the coach, and again passed over the gang plank, intending to cross the tracks of the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co. to seek refreshment in a cool breeze from the Columbia River, and also to urinate. Instead of going directly north, he turned to the west, and slowly walked in the darkness to the edge of the depot platform, which was not protected by a railing, and fell to the ground, sustaining such an injury that one of his legs had to be amputated below the knee. As a witness in his own behalf he testified on cross-examination that he had been at Biggs several times prior to June 28, 1903; that he. knew the station platform was level with the car tracks on the north, but elevated on the south, requiring a gang plank, over which he had always passed in entering or leaving the coaches of the Columbia Southern RailAvay Co., but he had never particularly noticed the ground around the station; that he knew the platform did not extend indefinitely to the west; and, referring to the time when he was injured, he said, “It was the darkest night I ever saw.”

In support of the judgment rendered it is asserted by his counsel that, as the defendants jointly maintain the depot at Biggs, each OAves a duty to persons arriving on the cars of one company to take passage on those of the other to provide a reasonably safe platform, and to see that it is suitably lighted at night for a reasonable time before the arrival and after the departure of their trains, and for any neglect in these particulars they are jointly and severally liable for any damage resulting therefrom; that the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co., having-agreed to stop its train No. 3 at Biggs, on the night in question, [560]*560for tbe accommodation of persons coming on tbe special train from Shaniko and intending to go west over its line, thereby established the relation of carrier and passenger with such persons from the. time of their arrival at the junction, and, neither company having lighted the depot or platform, plaintiff, who then was a passenger of both companies, and entitled to go on the platform for exercise and to secure pure air, had the right to assume from its dark condition that it was reasonably safe for his accommodation, but, having been dangerous by reason of the defendants’ failure to maintain a railing or a light, he is entitled to recover from them the damages awarded by the jury, and hence no error was committed as alleged.

1. It will be remembered that the night passenger trains of the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co. were not scheduled to stop at Biggs, and for that reason no light was maintained there. The plaintiff’s right to recover compensation for the injury sustained depends upon the existence of some duty owed him by the defendants, or either of them, the breach of which was the proximate cause of his hurt: Emry v. Roanoke Nav. Co. 111 N. C. 94 (16 S. E. 18, 17 L. R. A. 699). The law imposes on a railway company engaged in carrying persons for hire the duty of exercising reasonable care in keeping its platforms, approaches thereto, and station grounds, so far as passengers would naturally resort to them, properly lighted at night for a reasonable time, next prior to the arrival- or immediately following the departure of a train which its time cards specify will stop at night to take on or put off passengers: 3 Thompson, Negligence, §2691; 4 Elliott, Railways, §1641; Hutchinson, Carriers (2 ed.), § 516; Louisville, N. A. & C. Ry. Co. v. Lucas, 119 Ind. 583 (21 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
80 P. 1012, 46 Or. 549, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbot-v-oregon-railroad-or-1905.