Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. Yost

76 N.W. 901, 56 Neb. 439, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 252
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1898
DocketNo. 8296
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 76 N.W. 901 (Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. Yost) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. Yost, 76 N.W. 901, 56 Neb. 439, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 252 (Neb. 1898).

Opinion

Ragan, C.

Anthony Yost, in the district court bf York county, sued the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company for damages for injuries sustained by him by being struck by one of its engines. The claim of Yost ivas that the proximate-cause of the injury he had received ivas the negligence of the railroad company’s empl-oyés. He had judgment, to review which the railroad company has filed here a petition in error.

A contention of the railroad company is that the proximate cause of Yost’s injury was-his own negligence. Alger is a station on the line of the railroad company in the state of Wyoming. At or near this station is a gravel-pit. About a mile west of the station is a water-lank. In September, 1894, the company was hauling gravel from this gravel-pit to points on its line ive-st of Alger. At that time there ivas a switch engine at Alger which sometimes assisted the gravel-train up a grade west of the gravel-pit. This switch engine was accus[440]*440tomed several times each day to go out to the water-tank for water, sometimes pushing the gravel-train and sometimes following it. With all these facts Yost, who was a section-hand in the employ of the railroad company, was familiar. About 9 o’clock on the morning of September 6, 1894, Henry Walker, the section-foreman, his brother, John Walker, William Yost, his brother-in-law, the defendant in error, and one Jacob Lapp were at work surfacing and ballasting the track between Alger and the • water-tank. At the place where the men were at work thé roadbed rested on a fill -about five feet high. Ninety feet east of where the men were at work the railway track urns crossed by a highway, and from the place where the men were at work toward the east for a distance of seven hundred feet the. view of the railway track was wholly unobstructed. At this time, and while the men were so engaged, a gravel-train, consisting of something like twenty cars and. pushed by an engine, came from Alger going west, towaid Where these men were at work, running at the rate of about eighteen miles an hour. Following-this gravel-train and about one hundred fifty feet behind the same was a switch engine going to the tank for water. Just before the gravel-train reached the highway crossing thé whistle on the engine was sounded, the four men at work on the track heard the signal, Henry Walker, the foreman, and Lapp stepped off the track on the north side thereof, and John •Walker and Yost stepped off the track on the south side thereof. The gravel-train pushed by the engine passed the place where they were at work, and as Yost .was about to step back on the track he was struck by the following switch engine and injured.

The argument is that Yost stepped, or attempted to step, back on this track without looking to the east to see if an engine or train was following, and that 'his failure to look was negligence and the proximate cause of his injury. If Yost neglected to look to the east before stepping upon the track, was such neglect negligence? [441]*441He was a man about twenty years of age, and had for more than a year been in the employ of railway companies as a section-hand. He had been working on this particular track at and'about this place for about a week before he was injured. He knew that this switch engine passed and repássed several times each day between Alger and the water-tank; that it sometimes helped push the gravel-train and sometimes followed it. He had been warned by his brother-in-law, the section-foreman, not only to step off the track when this gravel-train approached, but to step off the fill so as to avoid danger from gravel nr stone falling from the passing trains. He had been instructed by his foreman that after a train passed not to go back on the track without looking in the opposite direction from which the train was going to see if an engine or train was following. Under these circumstances we think that all reasonable and unprejudiced minds would concur in saying that if Yost stepped, or attempted to step, back on this track after the gravel train passed without looking on the track- towards’ the east his conduct was negligence.

Did Yost look to the east before attempting to step back on the track after the gravel-train-had passed? He testified:

Q. Now, When you were working there, What occasion - did you have, if any, to leave the track? How did you come to get off the track? What made you do that?
A. My boss holloed out to let the train have the track.
Q. What train was that? What kind of a train?
A. It was a gravel-train.
Q. Now, when the boss said that What did you do?
A. Just stepped down off the track.
Q. How far, about, did you go from the track?
A. About five or six feet.
Q. Now, after you had stepped off the track and the train came along, or near by, what did you do then?-
A. Well, after it was by, we got up on our work again.
Q. In'the place where you were?
[442]*442A. Yes, sir.
Q. Now when this gravel-train went by did you attempt to do that?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you get on the track, or do you know?
A. No; I did not get quite on.
Q. Now after you attempted to get on tlie track wkiat is the next tiling you remember?
A. I got struck.
Q. In getting back on the track at this time you were hurt. I will ask if you went back in the manner you usually did?
'A. Yes, sir.
Q. State in what manner you did at this time.
A. Well, I just got down about five or six feet away from the track. When this gravel-train ivas by, I just stepped up as I usually did, and looked both ways, and just as I got up here I got struck.
Q. Now you state that when you went back you looked along the track. Did you see any switch engines coming?
A. No, sir.
Q. Which way were you standing, and how were you approaching the track?
A. I ivas standing facing the north.
Q. What time of the day was it that this accident happened?
A. It was about half past nine o’clock in the morning.
Q. Was the sun shining?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. How far away was it.,—that is, the gravel train—• which had just passed when you got on the track?
A. Oh, about six feet.
Q. Did you go clear up on the track?
A. No, sir.
Q. About how close did you get to the south rail?
A. Oh, close enough so that the engine struck me.
Q. Were you still standing outside the rail?
[443]*443A. Yes, sir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 N.W. 901, 56 Neb. 439, 1898 Neb. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-v-yost-neb-1898.