Blevins v. A., T. S. F. Rld Co.

1895 OK 22, 41 P. 92, 3 Okla. 512, 1895 Okla. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 27, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1895 OK 22 (Blevins v. A., T. S. F. Rld Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blevins v. A., T. S. F. Rld Co., 1895 OK 22, 41 P. 92, 3 Okla. 512, 1895 Okla. LEXIS 48 (Okla. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by This is a suit brought by the plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, against the defendant in error to recover damages on account of injuries claimed to have been suffered in consequence of the negligence of the defendant in error. On the 26th day of March, 1892, the plaintiff filed his complaint in the district court of Oklahoma county against the defendant, alleging the incorporation of the defendant; that it was running a railroad train through Oklahoma City, in this territory; that on the 29th day of February, 1892, the plaintiff contracted with the defendant to convey two car loads of cattle from its station of Purcell to Oklahoma City, for which the plaintiff agreed to pay the defendants; that as a part of this contract, the plaintiff was to have transportation for himself between said points; that the defendant railroad company agreed to transport the plaintiff from Purcell to Oklahoma City upon the caboose attached to the freight train in which the plaintiff's cars of *Page 514 stock were shipped, so that the plaintiff would be able to care for the stock during transportation between said points; that under said contract, the plaintiff shipped his cars of stock on the defendant's road, and became a passenger thereon between said points; that when the said defendant's train, on which the plaintiff was a passenger, was nearing Oklahoma City on the night of February 29, 1892, the plaintiff, being in the caboose attached to said train for the accommodation of passengers, the agents and employes of the defendant in charge of the train, negligently stopped the train about half a mile south of Oklahoma City, and that the caboose on which the plaintiff was riding, was stopped upon and directly over the bridge, which was about twenty-five or thirty feet in elevation above the ground; that the night was very dark, and that the conductor in charge of the train came to the plaintiff while the car was stopped upon the bridge, and negligently informed him that the train had arrived at Oklahoma City; whereupon the plaintiff, relying upon the information imparted to him by the conductor, went upon the platform of the caboose in which he was riding, to alight from said train.

That owing to the extreme darkness of the night the plaintiff was unable to see that the car was standing upon the bridge, but supposed the same to be standing at the station at Oklahoma City, and in attempting to alight from the car, and owing to the darkness that everything looked black, that plaintiff supposed that the car was the usual distance from the ground, and supposed that the blackness he perceived was coal cinders, and he stepped off the platform of the caboose, whereupon he fell to the ground, a distance of twenty-five or thirty feet from the car; that there were no lights on the platform or steps of the car at the time he attempted to alight.

The plaintiff further alleged that he was without *Page 515 negligence on his part in attempting to so alight, and that his fall from the car was wholly occasioned by the carelessness and negligence of the agents and employes of the defendant in charge of the train, and that by reason of said fall the plaintiff was greatly and permanently injured and disabled.

In answer, the defendant averred that the train upon which the plaintiff was riding by virtue of the said contract was a freight train, and that the danger, as plaintiff well knew, was more upon a freight train than upon a passenger train, and that the injury to the plaintiff was not caused by any negligence on the part of the defendant, or its agents or employes, and that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence on his part, which was the direct cause of the injury to the plaintiff complained of; that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence in this, that he took passage upon a freight train, and went to sleep upon said train, and that the train having stopped the plaintiff, without any notice from the agents of the defendant in charge of the train that the train had stopped at the station, and without asking any of the agents or servants of the defendant in charge of the train whether the train had stopped at the station, in the darkness of the night aroused himself from sleep, and with a long "prod-pole" in his hand voluntarily went out of the caboose in which he was riding, and without making any inquiry to ascertain whether said train had stopped or whether it was standing on the bridge or embankment, voluntarily jumped from the train while the train was standing on the bridge and was thereby injured; that the plaintiff failed to use the pole which he had in his hand to ascertain whether the train was standing on the bridge or on the level ground; that such negligent conduct on the part of the plaintiff was the sole cause of the injury, if the plaintiff was injured at the time and place mentioned *Page 516 in his complaint. To this answer the plaintiff replied by a general denial, and alleging that he was illiterate, and did not know the character of the contract he had signed. A trial was had upon these issues by a jury.

Special questions were submitted to the jury and returned into court signed by the foreman in behalf of the jury, as follows:

1. "Ques. Did the plaintiff ship the stock from Gainesville, Texas? Ans. Yes."

2. "Q. Is Purcell in the Indian Territory? A. Yes."

3. "Q. Did the plaintiff sign the contract at Purcell, introduced in evidence? A. Yes."

4. "Q. Did the plaintiff ship the cattle to Oklahoma City? A. Yes."

5. "Q. Did the train stop south of the station at Oklahoma City, and south of the switches and sidetracks at said station? A. Yes."

6. "Q. Did the train stop where it did for the purpose of switching the plaintiff's cattle to the stock yards? A. Yes."

7. "Q. Was the train on which the plaintiff was riding a freight train? A. Yes."

8. "Q. Was the plaintiff asleep on the train between Norman and Oklahoma City? A. Yes."

9. "Q. When did the plaintiff wake up from his sleep? A. After the train whistled for Oklahoma City."

10. "Q. Who waked plaintiff up? A. Mr. Speed."

11. "Q. Did the plaintiff get up and put on his overcoat immediately after he was awakened? A. Yes."

12. "Q. Did the plaintiff then say to the witness, Speed, 'Where are we at?' A. No."

13. "Q. Who told the plaintiff 'they are setting your cars out at the stock chute,' if anyone? A. Mr. Speed."

14. "Q. Did the conductor say anything to the plaintiff *Page 517 after he was awakened, and before he went out of the caboose? A. No."

15. "Q. Who was the conductor of the train, in charge of the train? A. Hamrick."

16. "Q. Who told the plaintiff to get off the caboose at the time he got off? A. No one."

17. "Q. Did the plaintiff tell anyone he was going to get off the caboose before he did get off.. A. No."

18. "Q. Was anyone with the plaintiff when he got off the caboose? A. No."

19. "Q. Did any one see the plaintiff get off the caboose? A. No."

20. "Q. Did the conductor know that the caboose was standing on a bridge? A. No."

21. "Q. If the plaintiff had remained in the car until the train got up to the station, would he have been injured? A. No."

22. "Q. Did the plaintiff do anything when he was on the steps of the caboose to ascertain whether the train was standing on a bridge or on the ground? A. No."

23. "Q. Did the plaintiff have a 'prod-pole' in his hand while he was on the steps of the caboose? A. No."

24. "Q. Did the plaintiff do anything with the prod-pole to ascertain the distance from the car to the ground? A. No."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1895 OK 22, 41 P. 92, 3 Okla. 512, 1895 Okla. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blevins-v-a-t-s-f-rld-co-okla-1895.