Byrket v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway

10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 30, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73 (Byrket v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrket v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway, 10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

[74]*74In this case, which below was an action brought by Byrket for injuries claimed by him to have been sustained by reason of negligence of the defendant company, the plaintiff in error complains of the action of the court below in several respects. The one especially argued is the court’s charge to the jury, at the close of the evidence in the case, to find in behalf of the defendant. Several of the other alleged errors are so closely connected with this that they may be treated as incidental to it, and our judgment is, that if the court was right in instructing the jury to find for the defendant, the other alleged errors were not prejudicial to the plaintiff even if the court was in any one of its rulings in those respects in error.

The plaintiff, Byrket, had been for several years in the employ of the defendant company, sometimes acting as brakeman, sometimes in the capacity of conductor upon some of its trains, and I think at one time was known as a pony conductor or the conductor of a pony engine. At the time of the unfortunate occurrence which has been made the basis of this action, in which the plaintiff received severe injuries, he had been telegraphed to while at Jonesville, Michigan, to come to Air Line Junction in Ohio, as soon as possible, and it was while proceeding to Air Line Junction that he received the injury for which he seeks damages. He had arrived at the Union Station in Toledo and then proceeded to walk along one of the tracks of the defendant company from the Union Station to Air Line Junction, and it is indicated by the evidence that he designed at some place along this line to take an electric car, but he concluded that he could arrive at Air Line Junction, his destination, more speedily and readily by proceeding along the trade, and his claim is, that in doing this he was complying with the requirements of the defendant company; that he was in the discharge of his duty as an employe and that he had been instructed by the officials of the compány that at all times when in discharge of the duties pertaining to his employment, he must keep upon the right of way. Our judgment is, that any such instruction was not to be construed by him so technically and that the general instruction that he was to proceed to Air Line Junction and arrive there as soon as possible, was to be construed according to its [75]*75reasonable spirit and that he had a right to proceed'by any ordinary means of safe transportation to the place of destination where he was required to report.

The principal question that is involved here requires some consideration of the nature of his duties while upon the defendant’s right of way and track and of the correlative duties of the defendant company toward him while he was at the same place. Tie insists that his situation was much that of a person who would be at the time doing some work for the company and that it was the duty of the engineer upon an approaching train to keep a lookout for him while he was upon the company’s track; and he attempts to fortify this claim by proof that it was a common custom for the employes of the company to use the traók in that locality as a sort of a passage way from the Union depot to Air Line Junction while going to or from their work.

The plaintiff claims that at the time of this occurrence he was walking upon a track known as the “east-bound track” and that the engine which struck him was coming from the east, moving eastward, and the evidence shows those two facts. The defendant company had a right to move its trains upon whichever of 'these .tracks it saw fit and in whatsoever direction it" saw fit; it had the right, no matter what the tracks were called and no matter for what purpose it ordinarily used either one, to move its trains either east or west upon the so-called “east-bound” or the so-called “west-bound” track, although the circumstance that the engine was moving westwardly and upon what was usually,treated as an “east-bound” track might be one circumstance bearing upon the care due from the plaintiff and also might, under some circumstances, upon the asserted negligence of the defendant.

It is apparent from an examination of the numerous authorities in cases similar to the one at bar, that every case must stand almost upon its own footing, and it is not likely that we shall find eases that are upon all fours with one another, although counsel in argument asserts oftentimes that one case is precisely like another in all its features. Much stress is laid by counsel for plaintiff in error upon the case of L. S. & M. S. Ry. [76]*76v. Ford, 18 C. C., 239, which, was decided by this court at the January term, 1899. The case has some features similar to those in the case at bar, but it has others dissimilar to the ones under consideration by us here. In the Ford case the conditions were such that the. engineer of a train having knowledge of the fact that persons were accustomed to walk upon the track, was unable to distinguish persons upon the track until almost upon them; whereas in the case at bar there was no difficulty on the part of either the engineer or the man upon the track in discovering objects at remote distances. It is claimed, indeed, on behalf of the plaintiff in error, as one of the grounds upon which this judgment should be reversed, that he could see all the way from the point of injury to Air Line Junction, which was quite a distance away, and that he was thereby apprised that no train was coming from that direction on the “east-bound” track, so that he had a right to conclude that it was safe for him to walk upon that track.

The conclusion must logically be drawn that if it was easy for him to see all the way to Air Line Junction, it was equally easy for him to see in the opposite direction, if he had looked in the opposite direction at the time when the train that struck him was sufficiently near to manifest its approach. In his testimony there is 3n indication that he did look back about once every hundred feet, but in one part of his testimony he says that probably he went one hundred and fifty feet from the time he last looked back before the engine struck him. Of course any statement of this kind is to be received and construed reasonably by the court. A man does not measure^by paces the exact distance that he travels between the several times of using his faculties of observation, and it is probably impossible for the man to say how long a time had elapsed and how much distance he had traveled between one time of looking and another. But, however all this may be, it is manifest that if he had looked a sufficient time before he was struck to see the trains approach, there would have been no difficulty in seeing the danger and escaping the injury. There is nothing to indicate that he could not have leaped from the track if he had seen the train bearing down upon him. While it ■ is claimed bjr the plaintiff that it [77]*77would have been unsafe for him to walk upon either side of the track, or between the two tracks, by reason of certain circumstances which were given in evidence, there is no claim that in the immediate emergency of the train’s approach, if it had been observed, he could not have escaped to a place of safety by leaping upon the other track or by leaping to one side, even into a ditch if necessary.

The court did not, apparently, arrest the ease from the jury or charge the jury for the defendant upon the ground of any holding by the court that, as a matter of law he was guilty of negligence directly contributing to or causing his own injury.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrket-v-lake-shore-michigan-southern-railway-ohiocirct-1906.