Davis v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

17 N.W. 406, 58 Wis. 646, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 262
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 17 N.W. 406 (Davis v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 17 N.W. 406, 58 Wis. 646, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 262 (Wis. 1883).

Opinion

Taylob, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages resulting to him from the explosion of a steam boiler of the defendant company. The steam boiler which exploded and caused the injury was used for working a pile-driver, and at the time was on a flat car on a side track on the right hand of the main line going north from the depot in the city of Fort' Atkinson. About thirty-five minutes before the explosion took place,-the men in charge of the steam boiler and pile-driver left the same and went into the city to take their dinners. During this thirty-five minutes none of the employees of the defendant were in charge of the pile-driver or steam boiler. When the employees in charge left, there was a strong fire in the fire-box, and, as the proof tends to show, plenty of water in the boiler, and according to the evidence of the engineer in charge the safety-valve was set so as to blow off steam at 110 pounds pressure. The cause of the explosion was not very clearly shown on the trial, but there was evidence which strongly tended to show that the boiler was either originally made of brittle and imperfect iron, or that it had become so- by use, and that the steam did not blow off under a pressure of 120 pounds, which all admit was a dangerous pressure.

Upon the trial, and after all the evidence was in, the cir[648]*648cuit judge directed a verdict for the .defendant. This verdict was directed, as is stated by the learned .counsel for the ■ defendant, “upon the simple ground that the alleged negligence, which the plaintiff claimed the defendant was answerable for, was not a breach of any duty which the defendant •owed to the plaintiff in the position in which the plaintiff had placed himself. The simple fact is that the plaintiff went upon the ground of the defendant uninvited, and in pursuit of his own personal ends, and was there injured by the accidental explosion of a boiler belonging to the defendant and rightfully being where it was.”

The location of the place where the accident took place is fully described in the bill of exceptions, and is briefly as follows: The defendant’s track runs nearly north and south through the city of Fort Atkinson, and crosses the Rock river on a bridge running in the same direction. The depot is south of the bridge about 800 feet. It is claimed by the plaintiff that there are two public streets which cross the line of the railroad track, east and west, north of the depot and south of the bridge. The first street north of the depot is Milwaukee street. About the existence of this street there is no contention. North of Milwaukee street and south of the river, the plaintiff claims there is a public street, crossing the defendant’s track in an east and west direction, called South Water street. The defendant denies that this street crosses the track, but admits that it is an open public street east of the track. The plaintiff claims that there is also a public street running north from South Water street to the river, and that the defendant’s track crosses this street in a northeasterly direction. The place where the pile-driver stood when the boiler exploded was within the limits of what the plaintiff claims is South Water street; and if the street is a public street its entire width across the track, there is no doubt but that the pile-driver stood in that street. The plaintiff was about fifty feet north [649]*649of the pile-driver and 500 feet north of the depot when the explosion took place; and counsel for the plaintiff claims that he was within the limits of the street he calls Lumber street.

The evidence shows that the right of way of .the defendant was fenced on both sides thereof, from what is claimed to be the north side of South Water street to the river, and on the west side again from the south side of what is claimed to be South Water street in a southerly direction, leaving a space between the ends of the fence on the west side about the width of South Water street. For a considerable distance north of the south line of what is called South Water street, the right of way was filled with lumber piles on the east side and cord-wood on the west side, leaving only room for two railroad*tracks. The west track was the main track and the east one the side track, on which the pile-driver stood when the explosion took place. The lumber piles on ■the east side of the track extend across what is claimed to be South Water street, except an opening of ..about eighteen .feet near the south side of the linó of said street. The defendant claims that this opening was a private crossing used by Wilcox, the owner of the lumber-yard, and was known as Wilcox crossing, and was not a public street in any sense; at all events, not exceeding in width the eighteen feet which he designates as Wilcox crossing. Wilcox’s lumber and timber piles extend north, along the east side of the right of way, to within fifty feet the river, occupying a great portion of the east part of the respondent’s right of -way. On the west side Wilcox’s wood piles occupied the west part of the right of way about forty or fifty feet north of the crossing.

The plaintiff claims that for twenty years or- more — in fact, ever since the company built its bridge across the river — the public have constantly used the bridge to cross from the north to the south side of the river, and vice versa, and the right of way of the railroad south of the river, as [650]*650far south as Milwaukee street, as a traveled way from the bridge south to reach South Water and Milwaukee streets; that the place where the people traveled was between the side track and the main track; and that the defendant had full knowledge of the fact that such right of w7ay had been and was so constantly used for foot travel; and that no protest or objection had been made by said company to the use of its right of way for that purpose.

The evidence also shows that the day before the accident happened the defendant was repairing the bridge, and the trains from the north did not cross the bridge; the passengers and baggage were transferred across the bridge on a hand car, or passed the bridge on foot, to the train on the south side of the river; that on the day the accident happened the train stopped for a few minutes on the north side, but finally passed over the bridge; that some of the passengers got off on the north side and passed the bridge on foot; that the plaintiff, who was a hotel keeper, came to defendant’s depot to solicit passengers for his hotel, and seeing the train stop north of the river, and passengers alighting therefrom, and perhaps supposing the train would not cross, started north along the traveled track between the side and main track to meet the passengers from the train, and when about fifty feet north of the pile-driver, while walking along the said traveled path or track, the boiler exploded and he was injured.

It is said the ruling of the court below was that the plaintiff was either a trespasser on the defendant’s right of way, or at best a mere licensee thereon, and could not, therefore, recover of the defendant company, unless he showed “that he was injured by the wilful misconduct of its servants or em ployees; ” and it thereupon directed a verdict for the defendant.

The learned counsel of the appellant claims that the evidence tends to show — First, that the boiler and pile-driver, [651]*651when it exploded and injured the appellant, was standing within the limits of a public street of, the city of Fort Atkinson; second, that the appellant, when injured, was passing along a public street of said city; third,

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.W. 406, 58 Wis. 646, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-wis-1883.