Birrell v. Great Northern Railway Co.

112 P. 362, 61 Wash. 336, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 1342
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1910
DocketNo. 9021
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 P. 362 (Birrell v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birrell v. Great Northern Railway Co., 112 P. 362, 61 Wash. 336, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 1342 (Wash. 1910).

Opinion

Morris, J.

Appellant is the widow of J. W. Birrell, who was killed by being struck by an engine of the respondent company, on December 26, 1909, and brings this action to recover for such death. Upon the trial below, the court directed verdict and judgment for defendant, and plaintiff appeals.

The accident occurred in the railway yards at Seattle. Deceased was a dining car conductor, and had been directed to exchange cars with another conductor named Chapman. They finished checking up their cars, which were lying in the coach yards about one-quarter of a mile south from the union depot, and having received the O. K. of the commissariat office, started north through the yards to reach the exit at the depot. It was then about seven o’clock in the evening, and dark. As they walked north, they proceeded along what is known as the [337]*337six-foot path, being a space between the two main tracks, six feet wide from tie to tie. In the middle of this path about every one hundred feet was a switch stand, which showed different colored lights at night, indicating to the engineers of incoming and outgoing trains the condition of the numerous switches or tracks running from the main track.

Deceased and Chapman had proceeded but a short distance on this path when a passenger train south bound left the depot and passed them on the left or west track. They knew that trains were due to arrive and depart at about that time, and they concluded between themselves that this six-foot path was too dangerous, and that it would be safer to turn to the right, cross the east track, and walk north along a path running at the east of this track. To the right of this track was a marsh, wet and muddy, to which the ground on the east slopes, the path being on the top of the slope and about two feet wide, and the same distance from the track to its outer edge. From this path the ground slopes sharply to the marsh. The ties extended about a foot or a foot and a half beyond or outside of the rails, so that this path was from six to twelve inches wide outside the ties. It was not lighted. They had proceeded about fifty yards, walking side by side, Chapman along the slope and deceased upon the path, when suddenly Chapman says he felt something brush his shoulder and saw Birrell thrown under a switch engine which had approached from the south without warning of any sort, and that he neither heard the sound of its approach nor saw any flash or showing of headlight along the track. There was. testimony to the effect that this path was much used by employees leaving the yards, and that it was regarded as a safe way. Chapman further testified that the switch engine proceeded about two lengths after striking Birrell, when it stopped, and the engineer came back and said he did not see anybody upon the track, and that he was “firing at the time.”

Deceased had been running out of Seattle for about three months, returning every fourth day, and remaining some [338]*338thirty-two hours before again taking his run. Upon each of these occasions he would walk through this same yard in leaving and returning to his car. It also appeared in the testimony that “there are local trains going in and out, and also two through trains around about that time,” and that switching engines “are running all the time, . . . they have to work night and day . . . and are running backwards and forwards there all the time . . . working up and down the yards all day and all night.” These are the main facts upon which the court below adjudged deceased guilty of contributory negligence, and upon which the ruling appealed from is predicated.

In determining the question of contributory negligence, it is difficult to announce a rule which will alike fit all cases. As is said in Keefe v. Seattle Elec. Co., 55 Wash. 448, 104 Pac. 774, cited by appellant, negligence is a relative question, and the conduct of deceased must be measured with the line of ordinary prudence. “The facts declare the law in such cases,” and “it all comes down to the question of ordi nary care under the given circumstances,” and “it is only when . . . the situation as to negligence is so plain, clear and unequivocal as to admit of but one answer that the court may declare negligence as a matter of law.” Henry v. Seattle Elec. Co., 55 Wash. 444, 104 Pac. 776.

Applying these rules for the measurement of the conduct of deceased, to determine whether or not he acted as a man or ordinary prudence would have acted at such a time, in such a place, with such a knowledge of the conditions confronting him and to be anticipated, we can make but one answer, the same as made by the court below. The courts have said over and over, in deciding cases of this character, and it is the undoubted law, that men who know and appreciate the dangers of their surroundings cannot throw the entire burden of their safety upon others. Nature has given men senses to aid them in self-protection, and when, under such circumstances as we have before us, men refuse to em[339]*339ploy or use such senses in their protection, they are guilty of such contributory negligence as to preclude a recovery in case of injury. Deceased and Chapman were in a place of comparative safety, upon a hard, dry, smooth-surfaced path, six feet wide from tie to tie, between two parallel tracks, having switch stands in its center line about one hundred feet apart, showing a light — a path familiar to them and doubtless often traveled, the path which naturally would suggest itself as the path to reach the exit. This is apparent from the fact that they took this path without any discussion as. to the proper path to take, and it did not occur to them that it was dangerous until the train passed them on the west track going south.

Chapman testifies that the ordinary engine would extend a foot and a half over the rails; switch engines still further.. That would be about the distance of the ties beyond the rails, so that if two trains should pass each other, a person walking on this path would have a safety zone approximately six feet, wide, with its center line fixed by the lights of the switch posts. If such a path suggested danger tu deceased because of the frequent passing of trains or switch engines on its parallel tracks, what greater safety could there be in the path chosen in its stead, approximately six inches wide beyond the end of the ties which extended from one foot to a foot and a half beyond the rail, giving a space two feet wide on top, then sloping sharply to the water, with no lights to guide one? If there was danger in the six-foot path from passing engines, because of the extension of the engine beyond or over the rails, it is difficult to see how there could be less danger walking on this second path, upon a space two feet wide, with a companion closely upon the right, walking upon the slope-to the marsh, and the track closely upon the left, a space that must necessarily be swept by any passing engine; and then walking on with, so far as this record shows, no look to the rear to discover the possible approach of “local trains going in and out, and also through trains around about that time,” [340]*340or of switch engines “running backwards and forwards there all the time ... up and down all day and all night.” To voluntarily leave a place of comparative safety (although it is apparent that there was, either night or day, no place of safety in that yard, except to the person using due care and caution) and take a position of apparent danger, has of itself often been declared such contributory negligence as will defeat recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P. 362, 61 Wash. 336, 1910 Wash. LEXIS 1342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birrell-v-great-northern-railway-co-wash-1910.