Clune v. Ristine

94 F. 745, 36 C.C.A. 450, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2397
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 1899
DocketNo. 1,032
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 94 F. 745 (Clune v. Ristine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clune v. Ristine, 94 F. 745, 36 C.C.A. 450, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2397 (8th Cir. 1899).

Opinions

THAYER, Circuit Judge.

This record presents the general question whether a peremptory instruction to return a verdict in favor of George W. Ristine, receiver of the Colorado Midland Railroad Company, the defendant in error and the defendant below, was properly given. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony the facts which had' then been established were substantially as follows: On August 21, 1894, J. B. Blocker, who was the son of Mary E. Clune, the plaintiff in error, and the plaintiff below, was employed as a railroad engineer, and was engaged in running freight trains over the railroad of the Colorado Midland Railroad Company, between Colorado City and Leadville, Colo.' On the night of that day, as he was running his train through Eleven Mile canon, which is some distance west of Florence, Colo., and had proceeded up the canon about eight miles, his engine came in contact with a large rock that had slid down upon the track from'the slope on the south side of the track in which it had been embedded, the result being that the engine was overturned, and the plaintiff’s son was instantly killed. The rock in question was a granite boulder from 22 to 25 feet long, and was found to be from 5 to 6 feet high, when it landed upon the track, and weighed many tons. The mountain on the south side of the track abreast of where the accident occurred rose at a sharp angle to the height of about one thousand feet, and the foot of the mountain had been scored away so as to form a berm, or shoulder, on which to lay the track. The river or stream which flowed through the canon was on the north side of the track, and immediately adjacent thereto. The grading that had been done at the foot of the mountain.on the south side of the stream to form the roadbed was through a formation known as “slide” or “wash,” and consisted of boulders of various kinds embedded in clay or gravel. The rock which occasioned the accident slid out of the slope at the south side of the track, which had been made when the grading was done. This slope lay at an angle of about 45 degrees. The bottom of the rock as it lay in the slope before it moved was from 20 to 30 feet from the track, according to the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses, and at a height vertically of about 6 or 7 feet above the track. In its descent it pushed out of place the track, which was there laid on a fill. It had rained a very little on the night of the accident as the train left Flor[747]*747ence, but„there had been no unusual storm or Rood or seismic disturbance of any kind, either that night or for some time previously. The night of the accident was not unusually dark. The moon appears to have shone at intervals, but. at the place where the accident occurred the track lay in the shadow of the mountain, which made it difficult to see. Tiu: headlight of the engine, for some reason, had not burned very brilliantly on the night of the accident. The deceased was at his post when the accident occurred, and saw the rock a moment or so before the collision, and signaled for brakes, but not in time to prevent the disaster.

The defendant did not demur to the case which was made by the plaintiff’s testimony, but introduced further evidence, which was to the following effect: The railroad in question had been in operation about eight or nine years previous to the accident. After the contractors who constructed the road turned it over to the Colorado Midland Railroad Company, that company sent a gang of men into Eleven Mile caño a to dress u p the track through the cañón and flatten the slopes. They left the particular slope where the accident occurred at an angle of about 45 degrees, which was deemed safe. No special examination had ever been made of the rock which eventually slid out of place, to ascertain if it was safe, except such visual examination as could he made by an inspector or engineer traveling through the canon on a moving train or hand car. To an inspector thus traveling through the canon and viewing the rock in question, it extended, lengthwise of the cut about 22 feet and up the slope about 1.6 feet. It was nearl,y half as large as a freight car, and the lower edge of the rock Heart’st to the track seemed to have a bearing on other broken rock. From its bottom or lower edge the rock appears to have formed the face of the slope to the height of 16 feet, but it jutted out therefrom a few feet-. At its lowest point, it was 5 or 6 feet higher than the track, and from 10 to 20 feet distant therefrom. Its weight was about 210 tons, and the soil in which it was embedded was known to be ■‘wash” from the mountain. When the rock slid out of place on the night of the accident, it was found to be wedge-shaped; that is to say, the under side of the rock upon which it rested was not fiat, but inclined upwards to some extent, so that it would more readily slide out of place. The chief engineer of the railroad, who had been through the canon as often as six times a month for several years prior to the accident, and had made a visual examination of the road on such occasions, testified, in substance, that he had seen nothing at the place of the accident which led him to believe that the rock in question was insecure. Another witness testified, in substance, that it would have been impossible to tell whether the rock was insecure by sounding it with a hammer, owing to its great size, and that its peculiar wedge shape was not manifest until it had slid out of place. The testimony for the receiver further showed that about August 1, 1894, he had withdrawn the night track walkers from Eleven Mile canon, and that from that time forward until after the accident occurred, the canon was not patrolled but once a day, and then by daylight. This was because the rainy season was supposed to be over, and a night patrol was not deemed necessary.

[748]*748Upon this showing the trial court directed a verdict for the defendant, holding, apparently, that the facts heretofore recited could not give rise to any difference of opinion, and that all reasonable men would, of necessity, agree that the defendant was without fault. We are not able to concur in that view of the case. It is an elementary rule that a railroad company is under an obligation, both to its em-ployés and to' the.traveling public, to exercise ordinary care both in the construction and maintenance of its track and roadbed, to the end that they may be reasonably safe for the passage of trains; and the proper discharge of that obligation makes it the duty of a railroad company to be observant of all objects in close proximity to its ■track, which in the ordinary course of events may impair its safety. If rocks overhang its track, or loose rock is embedded in the slopes of cuts through which its track runs, in such a position that they may be displaced by the ordinary action of the elements, and precipitated upon its track, it should either remove them, or- take- other adequate precautions to guard against the danger, and render its track reasonably safe. In the case in hand we are unable to say that all reasonable men, listening to the evidence which was adduced at the trial, would have concluded that the receiver had performed his full duty with respect to caring for the safety of the track intrusted to his charge, and was not chargeable with any negligence. The rock which occasioned the accident was known to be a loóse rock. It was also known: to be embedded in slide or wash on the face of a steep slope, and that it was of enormous weight. If it did not rest upon a secure foundation, it was certain to fall sooner or later, and in its descent was sure to wreck the track, and might occasion great loss, both of life and property.

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Bluebook (online)
94 F. 745, 36 C.C.A. 450, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clune-v-ristine-ca8-1899.