Cooper v. Oregon Short Line R. R. Co.

262 P. 873, 45 Idaho 313, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 40
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1927
DocketNo. 4777.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 262 P. 873 (Cooper v. Oregon Short Line R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Oregon Short Line R. R. Co., 262 P. 873, 45 Idaho 313, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 40 (Idaho 1927).

Opinion

*318 ADAIR, Commissioner.

This is an action sounding in tort to recover damages from appellant, a common carrier, for injuries sustained by horses included in a carload shipment. The dereliction charged is that the carrier so negligently operated its freight train that one horse was killed and seven others were injured while being transported over appellant’s road. The particular negligence charged was that, in making up a freight train in the railroad yards at Pocatello, a division point, the employees of appellant company so negligently, carelessly and violently handled the train that the car of horses was jerked and jammed to such an extent, and such concussions were caused, that as a result the animals suffered certain specified injuries. The appellant joined issue upon the charge of negligence, and as an affirmative defense asserted that whatever damage or loss was sustained was proximately caused by and resulted from the respondent’s own carelessness and negligence, and from the inherent and natural weakness, vice, viciousness and propensities of the animals themselves. This appeal is taken from a judgment based upon a verdict for the respondent shipper.

Appellant challenges the integrity of the judgment on the ground of the insufficiency or total lack of evidence, it being urged that the court erred in not granting its motion for a directed verdict. This succinctly states the only reason assigned for a reversal.

It will be necessary here to briefly mention the salient features of the evidence in order that the conclusions reached may be understood. Respondent, a stock buyer, delivered to appellant at Rupert 24 head of horses for transportation to Los Angeles, California. Many of these horses had been purchased from different individuals, and they were.then assembled with others respondent had pre *319 viously owned, and there loaded in one stock-car. While in the stockyards, one horse, named “Dutch,” was fighting the others, and some trouble was encountered in loading these horses. A caretaker employed by respondent accompanied the shipment when it left the shipping point. He inspected the horses upon the arrival of the train at Minidoka and found them to be in good condition. In about an hour he returned to look again at the animals, and then observed a board broken in the car, and two of the horses down on the floor. Respondent, who arrived later on a passenger train, was notified that they were having trouble with the shipment, and this car was then taken to the stockyards, where the animals were unloaded. It was noticed that some of the horses were injured or scratched, but the exact extent of those injuries was not ascertained in the dark.

From Minidoka to Pocatello, both the owner and caretaker accompanied the shipment, riding in the caboose while the horses were carried in the car at the head of a train consisting of 75 cars. The train came to rest in the switch-yards of appellant at Pocatello about daybreak. The engine was detached from the train, and a blue flag was immediately placed on the train, denoting to appellant’s switchman that the train was in the hands of car men for inspection or necessary repairs, and was not to be moved or any car taken therefrom while the flag was so displayed. There was no rough handling of the train prior to its arrival in Pocatello, and no negligence is charged prior to that time.

Immediately upon arrival there the respondent and his employee both inspected the horses, and found them to be standing quietly, all up and in good condition. These men then left this car, seeking information as to when their train would depart. They were away from the car and off from the train until after 8 o’clock A. M., but were in the yard office or railroad yards during all that time, and in the near vicinity of this particular car. At about 8:20 one of appellant’s switching crews, as its first move that morning, .went to take this ear to a south-bound train, on which it was *320 to have been transported to Ogden. The blue flag was still on the train to which this ear was attached. Before coupling on to the car, the crew noticed that one horse was almost dead and others were down. They moved the car from the train on which it arrived, over to another track preparatory to attaching it to the new train on which it was destined to leave. This crew testified positively that there was no rough handling, jerking or jamming incident to moving said car.

Prior to this move, the condition of the horses had been observed and reported to the yardmaster, who later ordered the car taken to the stockyards and unloaded. One horse was dead, three others were down close to it, and several others had been wounded and injured more or less seriously. The dead horse was lying with its head toward the front, but close to the middle of the car.

The only testimony in the case relative to any alleged mishandling of the ear in question was the following, given by the respondent himself:

“Q. State whether or not you noticed any cars coupled onto the car of horses.....
“A. I did; they were switching, and there was from two to five or six cars coming in and going out.
“Q. In reference to the ear of horses, Mr. Cooper, what did you see in connection with the making up of that train? .... With particular reference to the carload of horses, I want to know if you saw them there while you were in the yard office, and outside.
“A. They would back in, get a few other cars and take them away; then back in on another switch and get some more. When they pulled the horses, I expected them to go set them on a sidetrack, and they didn’t. After that I didn’t see them for a little while, and I did see them going to the yard office, and after I got to the yard office I see the car twice after that. It backed in, and come back again. After that I didn’t see it any more until I found I had lost it — that’s why I went in the yard office, to see what track it would be on, and I had my suitcase ready. *321 We tried to keep up with it — that’s what we were doing out in the yards, but they were switching and jamming them around there, and— ....
“Q. Why do you say it was jammed around?
“A. Because of the sound of the train — the way it was coming together.”

No testimony was offered to the effect that the jamming or handling of the cars was of unnecessary or unusual violence, the foregoing excerpts being the only statements whatsoever from which even an inference of negligence could be drawn, except the one other fact that the injury actually occurred to many of the animals, after they had earlier been found to be in good condition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 P. 873, 45 Idaho 313, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-oregon-short-line-r-r-co-idaho-1927.