Gallagher v. Great Northern Railway Co.

212 N.W. 839, 55 N.D. 211, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 24
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 212 N.W. 839 (Gallagher v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallagher v. Great Northern Railway Co., 212 N.W. 839, 55 N.D. 211, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 24 (N.D. 1927).

Opinion

*213 Christianson, J.

This is an appeal from an order overruling a demurrer to the complaint. The action is one to recover damages for personal injuries. The complaint alleges that Stanley Gallagher, an infant of the age of fourteen years, is bringing this action through Harry Gallagher, his duly appointed guardian ad litem; that the above named defendant railway company is a foreign corporation engaged in the operation of a railway in the state of North Dakota and that it maintains a station on said railway at the town of Tagus in Mountrail county; that said town of Tagus is a municipal corporation organized under the laws of this state and that the main street of said town is a public highway running over and across the railway line of said defendant railway company within the limits of said town; that said main street is used by all persons coming into or leaving town in a southerly direction, and, generally, by all the residents of said town in going from that portion of the town which lies on the north side of the railway tracks of the defendant railway company to that portion of the town lying on the south side of said tracks; that there is no other crossing over the raihvay track of said defendant that can reasonably or conveniently be used by persons in making said passage; that the defendant Ellis is employed by the defendant railway company as a locomotive engineer and that he was in charge of the locomotive pulling the train at Tagus at the time Stanley Gallagher, sustained the injuries hereinafter referred to; and that the defendant Tallman -was the conductor in charge of the said train.

The complaint further alleges:

“That for many years last past it has been the custom of the defendants at frequent intervals to block said public highway and street crossing, with trains and to leave same blocked for indefinite lengths of time, ranging from a few minutes to an hour, without cutting the train when blocking the same, or leaving any manner of passage. That said custom is now and for many years past has been a matter of common knowledge in the community and was well known to the defendants above named, and to the said defendant Great Northern Eailway Company, and its officers and agents, and that the said defendants have frequently and repeatedly during several years last past, refused upon request to cut trains blocking said public highway or to allow a rea *214 sonable passage over and across said tracks upon said highway; and that it-has become the custom in said community for-pedestrians apt proaehing said crossing, while- the same was so blocked, to pass through, over and under said train so blocking said highway in any manner which seemed convenient or expedient to them; that this custom was a matter of common knowledge in said community and was well known for several years last past to the defendants and the officers, agents and employees of the Great Northern Railway Company defendant, and acquiesced in by them; that at all times hereinafter mentioned and fox; several years past by reason of the facts hereinbefore alleged, a custom and usage had been established at Tagus, North Dakota, of going over, under or through said trains blocking the said public highway, which fact was well known to the defendants herein.
“That heretofore and in the month of December, 1924, and during the evening of a bitterly cold day, Stanley Gallagher, the plaintiff herein, an infant, then the age of. fourteen years, was on the south side of said railway and returning to his home on the north side thereof, and that he was lawfully traveling upon the public highway .thereof. That prior to the time he reached said railway track, the defendants had caused a long freight train to be pulled over and across said public highway and that said highway was and had been blocked for over twenty, minutes by said train; that at said time the said plaintiff knew of the custom of said defendants to block said' crossing for indefinite lengths of time and knew of the custom of the public generally to pass along said highway and under, over or through the trains blocking the same, and knew that such custom was known to and acquiesced in by the said defendants and the. officers, agents and, employees of the defendant Great Northern Railway Company,, and also knew that in order to avoid serious physical discomfort, he would either have to adopt the -said custom and pass over, under of through said train so blocking,said highway, there being no place of shelter on the south side of the track, and that no such place was convenient, and that thereupon he, with others, while said train was so standing and unlawfully blocking said crossing, proceeded to pass between the cars of said train, and that just as he climbed onto the train, the defendants unlawfully,' wrongfully,, wilfully and negligently without warning to the plaintiff, and lacking in the exercise of due care and without ringing- a bell or sound *215 ing a whistle, caused said train to move slightly, and immediately thereafter stop abruptly, and that at the time the said train so stopped, the plaintiff had one foot on-the bumper between the said cars and-that thé sole of his shoe and foot were caught by the said bumpers and pinched therein and his foot bruised, the bones thereof dislocated and injured, and his foot lacerated, so that he could not move until another slight forward movement of the train, caused by the defendants at his request, and for the purpose of releasing said foot; and that upon being released therefrom the -plaintiff proceeded to a place of shelter on the north side of said track and thereupon through his father, Harry Gallagher, made arrangements for immediate medical and surgical attention to the injury which he had received as aforesaid, and was placed in charge of the surgeon of the defendant, Great Northern Eailway Company, and that by reason of said injury the said plaintiff received surgical attention and was confined to a hospital for many months and .that in consequence of said injury, and defendant’s negligence, his leg was amputated and that the plaintiff’s health was impaired in that several operations, resulted-and the wound so caused has never healed, and that in addition to having lost his leg, he is suffering from infection of the bone in his thigh, and is continually sick and in pain.
“That the defendants had no flagman or guard at said crossing and that notwithstanding the facts hereinbefore alleged, and of knowledge on the part of the defendants of the custom existing of crossing over, through or under said trains at said crossing, the said defendants aforesaid, wilfully, .unlawfully and negligently, after having blocked said crossing. for an unreasonable length of time, namely for more than twenty minutes, started its train without giving notice or signal, without ringing a bell or sounding a whistle, or otherwise apprising the public or this plaintiff in particular, of the impending danger.

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Bluebook (online)
212 N.W. 839, 55 N.D. 211, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-great-northern-railway-co-nd-1927.