Dotta v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

79 P. 32, 36 Wash. 506, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 583
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1904
DocketNo. 5022
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 79 P. 32 (Dotta v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dotta v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 79 P. 32, 36 Wash. 506, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 583 (Wash. 1904).

Opinion

Fullerton, C. J. —

This is an action for personal injuries. From the record it appears that the respondent the Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad Company had constructed a railroad track extending from First Avenue South, in the city of Seattle, eastward between Dear-born and Charles Streets to the main terminal tracks of the Northern Pacific Railway Company, which was used by the latter company as a switching track, and a track upon which it occasionally stored or left its cars. The track was constructed originally on a trestle over the waters of Elliott Bay, and stood some 18 or 20 feet above the water at low tide, but the space had been filled in, from time to time, underneath the track, until the distance was somewhat lessened, averaging perhaps twelve feet at the time of the appellant’s injury, which happened on the 25th day of June, 1902. The track, when not obstructed with cars, furnished a convenient way for those [510]*510desiring to pass to and from First Avenue South to the water front, and was extensively used for that purpose, particularly by the employees of several large manufacturing plants situated on the water front. The respondents, although they seem not to have forbidden the use of the trestle by pedestrians, did not invite or encourage travel over it by the manner of its construction. It was made unusually narrow — so narrow, in fact, that, when cars were standing upon it, there was but a very small space beside the cars and the ends of the ties along which a footman could pass, and this was made more difficult of passage by the occasional insertion of short ties, which left gaps in the way, from three to five feet wide, which had to be crossed. Because of its peculiar construction it was known locally as the “slim track.” No planks were laid upon it, either between the rails or elsewhere, over which a person could walk, and while it was shown that it was freely used as a passage way when clear, it appeared that it was very seldom that any one crossed over it when cars were standing upon it. Neither of the respondent companies had forbidden, in any public manner, the use of the track as a passage way, nor did they maintain lookouts or guards to warn pedestrians of tha times it was going to be put into use by themselves.

On the afternoon of the day above mentioned, the appellant, desiring to cross from First Avenue South to the water front, started over this trestle. At that time it contained several cars, the one closest to him being a large furniture car taking up almost the entire width of the trestle. Beyond it, and towards the Northern Pacific’s main track, were several coal cars. When the appellant reached the furniture car, he climbed upon it, and walked its full length along the top, when, seeing the coal cars ahead of him, he retraced his steps and [511]*511climbed down to the track on the ladder he used in getting on to the car. He then crossed over to the other side of the track, and looked along the trestle, apparently for the purpose of ascertaining if there was room to pass along the side of the cars. He then turned and started to make his way back to the street. As he started back, an engine, which had backed on to the switch from its opposite end, butted into the standing cars, causing them to move towards and against the appellant, knocking him over and breaking his leg, and causing the injury for which he sues.

There is some dispute in the evidence as to how far the cars moved after being struck by the engine, the witnesses for the appellant varying in their estimates from a foot and a half to ten feet, but the correct distance' is probably a little more than the lesser, and much less than the greater, estimate, probably three or four feet. There would seem, however, to be nothing unusual in the fact that the cars moved when struck by the engine, or in the fact that they were so struck; it was simply the usual method of making a coupling where an engine couples on to a train of standing cars.

At the moment the engine struck the cars, the appellant was in a position where he could have been seen from the engine, had a lookout been maintained for him. How long he had been in that position can only be conjectured, but at most it could have been but a short space of time. When he was on top of the box car, he was in view, also, from the end of the switch that the engine entered. Where the engine was then is not shown, but the appellant says he did not see' it, and presumably it was out of sight. Be this as it may, however, it is apparent that the appellant was in a position to see the ehgine at all times when the engineer or fireman could [512]*512have seen him, and could easily have protected himself from injury had he but exercised his faculties.

The foregoing is, in substance, the facts as they appeared from the appellant’s evidence. At the conclusion of its introduction the respondents challenged its sufficiency, and moved that the case be withdrawn from the jury, and a judgment for the respondents entered. The motion was granted, and this appeal is from the judgmént so entered.

The principal controversy between the parties is over the question of their respective relations at the time of the injury. The appellant contends that he was a licensee, on the track of the respondents as of right, and that 'the the respondents were bound to exercise towards him reasonable care in the movement of their cars so as to protect him from injury, and that the question whether they did exercise such reasonable care, was, under the evidence, a question for the jury, and not for the court. ■ On the other hand, the respondents contend that the appellant was a trespasser, and inasmuch as it was not shown that they had knowledge of his presence on their track, they were liable only in case of such gross .negligence .on their part as would amount to wantonness, and that there was no proof of any such gross negligence. It is not contended, of course, by the appellant that he had any special permit to use this part of the respondents’ track as a footpath, or that the Respondents had, by grant or any affirmative act, conferred that right upon the public; but he contends that a license to use it is to be inferred from the fact that large numbers of people had so used it without remonstrance on the part of the respondents.

This court has held, in common with many other courts (Roth v. Union Depot Co., 13 Wash. 525, 43 Pac. 641, 31 L. R. A. 855) that if a railroad company [513]*513permits the public for a long time to pass over-its track at some given point, or to use it as a footpath between given points, without objection or hindrance, its consent or acquiescence in such use would be presumed, and it was bound to operate its cars with reference thereto. In such cases the railroad company and the people have a common right, or a joint use, in the track as a public way, and the right of each must be regarded. But it is not to be inferred from slight circumstaneés that a railway company has granted to the public a joint use of its track between given points. The track .is constructed primarily for the purpose of carrying passengers and freight in cars, and its use as a footpath is secondary always. To permit its use as a footpath greatly increases the danger to those traveling in cars, and it is not the policy of the law to encourage such use, and unless a clear right to be upon the track at .the given place is shown, a footman thereon is to be regarded as a trespasser.

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Related

Schommers v. Great Northern Railway Co.
172 P. 848 (Washington Supreme Court, 1918)
Hartley v. Lasater
165 P. 106 (Washington Supreme Court, 1917)
Imler v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.
89 Wash. 527 (Washington Supreme Court, 1916)
Nicol v. Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Co.
128 P. 628 (Washington Supreme Court, 1912)
Hamlin v. Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad Co.
79 P. 991 (Washington Supreme Court, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P. 32, 36 Wash. 506, 1904 Wash. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dotta-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-wash-1904.