Brimeyer v. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad

241 N.W. 409, 213 Iowa 1289
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
DocketNo. 41183.
StatusPublished

This text of 241 N.W. 409 (Brimeyer v. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brimeyer v. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad, 241 N.W. 409, 213 Iowa 1289 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The accidental injury under consideration herein occurred shortly after one o’clock A. M. on March 27, 1930, upon a certain bridge or trestle of the defendant’s. For the purpose of the discussion, the plaintiff’s ward, the injured boy, will be referred to as the plaintiff. His evidence was to the effect that he had been drawn to the place of the accident by a call for help; that upon answering the call he found a companion, Herbert Klass, whose foot had been caught between the ties of the bridge, and who was unable to extricate himself. It was in connection with the plaintiff’s efforts at extricating his companion from his dangerous position that he became himself subjected to the perils of an approaching train, and became unable to escape therefrom without injury.

The defendant-Company operates a line of railway between the city of Dubuque, Iowa, and LaCrosse, Wisconsin. The general course of the line is northerly-southerly. One of the stations along the line is North Buena Vista, a village of 190 people, and located in Clayton County. The area traversed by the railway is upon the west bank of the Mississippi River. Its topography is exceedingly rough and the railway winds, like a serpent, about the bases of the hills, and is carried over the low places by grades and.trestles. Four hundred feet south of the depot in this town is located the trestle where plaintiff’s injury occurred. This trestle is 137 feet long and is from 25 to 30 feet in height. It spans a creek and an area of low ground adjacent thereto, It is 10 feet wide and affords no facilities whatever *1291 for the use of pedestrians. Indeed it is a most forbidding rather than an inviting place for a traveler.

On the night in question, and while the plaintiff was engaged in an effort to release his companion from a perilous position, one of defendant’s freight trains approached from the south. It was a regular train running on its own proper schedule. It comprised nearly 100 cars and carried a tonnage of-3000 tons and was moving at the rate of 25 or 30 miles an hour. It was properly equipped with safety appliances and could be brought to a stop at a distance not less than 900 to 1000 feet. The track south of the depot does not lie in a straight line, but in a succession of curves. The presence of these curves rendered it impossible to keep the headlight of the train focused between its rails except for limited distances. While the plaintiff was engaged in his effort of assistance to Klass, and when he became aware of the approach of the train, he brandished a flash light as an attempted warning of his presence upon the bridge. The engineer and fireman saw the flash light and observed its approximate location, but were unable to bring their own headlight to a focus upon the locality until they were within a few hundred feet of the location. When the plaintiff had finished his service to Klass, his place upon the bridge was at a point about 25 feet south of the north end of the bridge. The train was too close upon him to .enable him to cover that distance in his attempted escape. ■ Tie therefore lay face-down upon a tie-cap at the extreme edge of the bridge and attempted to maintain this position while the train passed over it.. He was thrown-to the ground and was severely injured.

The plaintiff pleaded that the defendant had negligently failed to reduce the speed of its train after it discovered the plaintiff’s peril and predicated recovery on the doctrine of “last clear chance.” He also-pleaded that he was a licensee and not a trespasser and that the defendant-Company had failed to exercise the degree of care due to a licensee under the circumstances pleaded. Evidence was introduced intended to support these theories of recovery. . The cause is submitted here by the appellant upon three assignments of error, which elaborate the single proposition that a verdict should have been. directed for the defendant and that there was no basis in the evidence for the application of the doctrine of “last .clear chance,” and no *1292 basis in the evidence for the contention that the plaintiff was a licensee and not a trespasser.

I. Was the evidence sufficient to go to the jury on the contention that the plaintiff was a licensee and not a trespasser? It is made to appear that there was some pedestrian travel over the defendant’s right of way in the vicinity of this trestle. Four hundred feet southerly and westerly from this trestle were three residence properties, located close to the railroad right of way. These three properties were respectively occupied by residents. The substance of the evidence is that the pedestrian travel to and from these homes occasionally resorted to the- railroad right of way; and that some of this travel passed over the railroad trestle. It further appears that a highway extended northerly from these- homes toward, and past, the depot of the defendant and intersected one of the town’s streets at the north side of such depot. This highway was located on the west side of the railroad right of way abutting thereon and running parallel therewith. Its improvement included a wagon bridge standing parallel with the railroad trestle and covering the same creek. This highway was available to all pedestrian travel on the west side of the railroad. It is claimed, however, that in times of flood the creek overflowed the wagon bridge and that in such event the travel sought the higher grade on the right of way.

' This is the general character of the- evidence offered as proof that the railway company had acquiesced and consented to the public use of its right of way for pedestrian travel. There is no evidence of notice to the railway company other than such as may be inferred .from the fact of such travel. As already indicated, the construction of this trestle bridge was such as to leave no room for any pedestrian thereon while a train was passing thereover. The bridge was long enough to require a substantial period of time for a pedestrian to pass over it. It was so narrow as to expose the pedestrian to imminent and certain peril, if he should be overtaken thereon by a train. The curves of the railroad and the obstruction to vision caused by the high bluffs in the area are such that an approaching train is not visible at this bridge from either direction until such train comes into such close proximity as to put" a pedestrian on the bridge-in imminent peril. "It is not to be lightly inferred that *1293 the railway company knowingly consented to such a use of its property by the public'. Such use was not only perilous, but literally foolhardy.- The burden upon- the plaintiff was to show the public use by pedestrians, not simply of portions of the right of way, but such use of this trestle bridge. The evidence on this feature of the record is very indefinite and meager. The most that can be said is that it shows previous occasional trespass by the occasional pedestrian. It wholly fails to show such a general use or practice as would charge the railroad company with notice.

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Bluebook (online)
241 N.W. 409, 213 Iowa 1289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brimeyer-v-chicago-milwaukee-st-paul-pacific-railroad-iowa-1932.