Fallon v. United Railroads

151 P. 290, 28 Cal. App. 60, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 322
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 7, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1617.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 151 P. 290 (Fallon v. United Railroads) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fallon v. United Railroads, 151 P. 290, 28 Cal. App. 60, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 322 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff through the alleged negligence of the three defendants. The trial court sustained the defendants’ several demurrers to the complaint as amended, and this appeal is from the judgment rendered in favor of each of the defendants upon plaintiff’s refusal to further amend.

*62 As we will have occasion during the course of this opinion to refer to various allegations of the complaint in their bearing respectively upon the alleged liability of the several defendants, a summary of the allegations of the complaint at this time will save repetition.

From the complaint it appears that the plaintiff was employed by the Pacific Gas & Electric Company as a laborer, and that at the time of the injuries complained of he was engaged with other workmen in excavating a trench at the intersection of McAllister and Larkin streets in San Francisco. While he was in the trench a two-horse wagon, owned by the respondent Prager Company, Inc., approached said intersection. At the time of the approach of the team of the defendants, the United Railroads of San Francisco was operating an electric welding machine near the center of the intersection of said streets, which, when in operation, emitted sparks in great profusion for a distance of several feet, and a brilliant flash of light of a peculiar bluish color calculated, it is alleged, to frighten most horses. When abreast of the trench the team took fright at the sparks or flashes so emitted, and one of the horses fell into the trench and upon the plaintiff, breaking his right collar bone and both of his arms, and causing him to sustain a severe nervous shock. At the time of the approach of the team the driver thereof called to an employee of the United Railroads to turn off the current, such employee being stationed at this point for the purpose of turning on and off the current when necessary. It is alleged that the latter heard the driver call, and had ample time thereafter to turn off the electricity before the team passed into close proximity to the welding machine, but that he carelessly and negligently failed to perform this duty. At this time, however, the application of the welding machine to the rails in the street ceased temporarily; and the driver thereupon, it is charged, carelessly and negligently failed to wait to ascertain whether or not the electricity had been turned off, and drove his wagon into close proximity to the welding machine and alongside of the trench; that the employee of the United Railroads carelessly and negligently failed to notice such approach, and thereupon applied the machine to the rail, causing a shower of sparks and light of the character above mentioned to be emitted, startling the horses and causing them to jump, with the result that the *63 near horse pushed the off horse into the trench and upon the plaintiff. At the time of the accident the Pacific Gas and Electric Go. had a flagman stationed at or near the trench. The plaintiff claims that as the team approached the trench this flagman, neglecting his duty—-which was to watch and warn passing vehicles and persons of danger—walked away from his station and had his back turned thereto, and carelessly and negligently failed to turn around, or to look to see if there was any danger likely to arise by reason of the team approaching the trench; and that by reason of such negligent performance of his duty, and in failing to warn the driver in time to prevent the accident, or to warn plaintiff in time to enable him to avoid contact with the falling horse, the flagman was guilty of negligence, and that this negligence contributed to the injury of plaintiff.

Under this state of facts each of the defendants, as is not unusual in such cases, is seeking to be eliminated from the parties responsible for the plaintiff’s injuries. We will discuss the causes of action against the different defendants in the order in which they are named in the complaint.

1. The United Railroads. The first point urged by this defendant in support of the judgment is that the complaint fails to allege that the welding machine would frighten horses of ordinary gentleness, or that the horses concerned in this accident were ordinarily gentle or roadworthy. It is argued that allegations of these facts were absolutely essential to the statement of a cause of action, for without the former there could be no negligence, and without the latter no proximate cause. In support of these contentions it is insisted that the rule in this class of cases is that a person is bound only to guard against frightening gentle horses and not those having an aggravated propensity to take fright. (Piolett v. Simmers, 106 Pa. St. 95, [51 Am. Rep. 496]; Pittsburgh S. Ry. Co. v. Taylor, 104 Pa. St. 306, [49 Am. Rep. 580] ; Card v. Ellsworth, 65 Me. 547, [20 Am. Rep. 722].) These cases are but an enunciation of the doctrine of foresight of harm. Under certain circumstances the law imputes knowledge of danger, giving rise to the duty of exercising care, and it is upon the violation of this duty that cases of this character are predicated. The plaintiff herein alleges that the welding machine was calculated to “scare most horses.” This is a sufficient allegation that it would frighten *64 ordinarily gentle horses. The contention that the expression “most horses” might mean most horses that were vicious, shy, or skittish, or most horses that were driven upon the streets, is hypercritical and without merit, as is the further contention that the complaint fails to show that most horses upon the streets are ordinarily gentle.

Again it is argued that the injuries sustained by the plaintiff might have been caused by the inherent viciousness of the horses, and as there is no allegation concerning the disposition of either of the horses that the complaint for that reason is defective. The plaintiff herein was not the owner of the team, but his complaint alleges that the acts of the defendant would “scare most horses,” and further that the horses were frightened by reason of these acts, and that had the United Railroads refrained therefrom neither of the horses would have become frightened and the plaintiff would not- have become injured. Under these circumstances it seems to us that the plaintiff has stated all in this regard that is required.

It is next insisted that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, for the reason that this court judicially knows that a welding machine is not an object naturally calculated to frighten ordinarily gentle horses. Machines of this character are not generally in use upon the streets of the city, and we cannot judicially say that such machines will or will not frighten ordinarily gentle horses.

The complaint is again attacked on the ground that it does not allege that at the time of the injury the streets upon which the accident is alleged to have occurred were open to the public. If the streets were closed to public travel during the operation of the work, and for such reason the defendant was not bound to anticipate the presence of the team, it seems to us that this is a matter that may be set up as a defense, as the presumption is against public streets being closed or unsafe for travel. (Elliott on Streets, sec. 635.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 P. 290, 28 Cal. App. 60, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fallon-v-united-railroads-calctapp-1915.