Jamison v. San Jose & Santa Clara R. R.

1 Colo. L. Rep. 105
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Colo. L. Rep. 105 (Jamison v. San Jose & Santa Clara R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamison v. San Jose & Santa Clara R. R., 1 Colo. L. Rep. 105 (Cal. 1880).

Opinion

Morrison, C. J.

This action was brought to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff, Mary E. Jamison, while a passenger on defendant’s road; and a trial having been had in the late district court of the Twentieth Judicial District, judgment passed in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $300 damages, from which judgment the appeal in this case was taken.

It appears from the evidence that in the month of September, 1876, the city of San Jose was causing Los Gatos Creek to be widened at a point where it is crossed by defendant’s road; that an excavation was made on the east side of the creek, leaving the bridge spanning the creek propped and still standing; that at the time the excavation was twenty feet wide, leaving for that distance a chasm twelve feet deep between the edge of the east bank and the east edge of the bridge, over which there were no means [106]*106of passage, except upon the railroad track, which was undermined and had been propped, and boards laid along the rails, but over which the cars did not and could iiot pass. As a part of the means used and adopted by the defendant for the transportation of its passengers across the chasm above referred to, defendant laid a line of planks between the rails, extending from end to end across said creek, and filling the space between the rails, but without a railing on either side thereof. There was a log, ioxio inches, lying across the east end of the plankway, which three men could have removed. On the night of September 17, 1876, while the road was in this condition, the plaintiff, Mrs. Jamison, took passage as a passenger on defendant’s car, in the city of San Jose, at a point about a mile east of the bridge. This was at 9 p. m., and the car arrived at the bridge at 9:10 p. m.

Mrs. Jamison testified as follows: “The car went as far as the creek, and then the driver threw open the door and told us to change cars. I started across the plankway, which was twenty feet long. It was so dark I could not see where I was stepping. There were no guards along the plankway, and no lights except in the car I had just vacated, and in the car on the other side of the creek, and one on the other end of the bridge, at the center of the roadway. None of these threw any light on the plank-way, or made it possible to see it. I made one step on the plank-way, and the next I went over and fell to the bottom of the excavation. I fell over because it was so dark. I could not see where I was stepping. I had passed over the plankway several times before in daylight, and knew just exactly how the track was then, and how it was planked. I had crossed it that evening going into town, before it was dark. I was badly hurt.” This statement of plaintiff was corroborated by many witnesses.

Hattabaugh, a witness for plaintiffs, testified that he was following Mrs. Jamison across the plankway, and feeling his way with his cane; and had he not seen her fall, he thought he might have fallen himself.

There was no pretense that Mrs. Jamison called for a light or guide, and the testimony showed that she did not.

Plaintiffs also proved that the passengers transported upon defendant’s cars were in the practice of passing across the plank-way for the purpose of taking the cars at either side of the chasm, and that this fact was well known to defendant and its agents.

[107]*107The defendant produced witnesses who testified that the road and pathway across the bridge was suitably and sufficiently lighted, so that persons with ordinary care could readily see to cross the same.

The foregoing is substantially the evidence in the case as presented by the bill of exceptions. When the evidence was closed, the defendant, by its attorney, requested the court to direct the j'ury to find for defendant, which direction the court refused to give, and thereupon defendant excepted. Verdict for plaintiffs.

The only point presented for our consideration on this appeal is, that there was such contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Jamison as to defeat plaintiff’s right to a recovery.

The general doctrine is perfectly familiar to us, that when the negligence of the injured party contributes directly to the injury complained of, the law will afford no redress; and this principle is fully sustained by the authorities referred to by the learned counsel for the appellant. But negligence is a relative term, and is defined to be “the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided by those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or doing something which a prudent or reasonable man would not do. Moreover, it is not absolute or intrinsic, but always relates to some circumstance of time, place, or persons.” Broom’s Legal Maxims, 329; Richardson v. Kiev, 34 Cal., 75. And the question whether there was contributory negligence in any given case is generally one for the jury to pass upon and determine. “The fact of negligence is generally an inference from many facts and circumstances, all of which it is the province of the jury to find. It can very seldom happen that the question is so clear from doubt that the court can undertake to say, as a matter of law, that the jury could not fairly and honestly find for the plaintiff It is not the duty of the court in such cases any more than in any other to usurp the province of the jury and pass upon the facts. And the non-suit should only be granted in such cases where the evidence of the misconduct on the part of the injured party is so clear and irresistible as to put the case on a par with those cases where a nonsuit is granted for a failure to introduce evidence sufficient to go to the jury upon some point essential to the plaintiff’s case. The fact must be so clear that, looking upon the plaintiff’s case in the most favorable light, and giving him the benefit of all con[108]*108troverted questions, the court can see that a verdict in his favor must necessarily be set aside.” Schierhold v. N. B. & M. R. R. Co., 40 Cal., 447.

In the case now under consideration, it is claimed, on behalf of appellant, that the evidence clearly shows contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Jamison, ior the reason that she was familiar with the condition of the road at the point where she was injured; that it was very dark, according to her own statement, and that it was her duty, in the exercise of ordinary prudence under the circumstances, to have called upon an employee of the company for a light. This we understand to be the argument in favor of the appellant, and the ground taken by the defendant in the court below in support of its motion for a nonsuit, or, what was more than the equivalent of a nonsuit—to wit, a direction to the jury to find a verdict in favor of the defendant.

This brings us to the question: Was it per se contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Jamison to attempt to walk on the structure erected by the defendant for the transfer of passengers from one of its cars to the other? To our minds, and in the view we take of this case, it is an important fact that the defendant was a common carrier, and the plaintiff, Mrs. Jamison, was a passenger for hire on its line of road. The duty imposed by the law on common carriers is very clearly laid down both in textbooks and in reports. We will refer to a few authorities on the subject:

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Related

Fairchild v. Cal. Stage Co.
13 Cal. 599 (California Supreme Court, 1859)
Richardson v. Kier
34 Cal. 63 (California Supreme Court, 1867)
Schierhold v. North Beach & Mission Railroad
40 Cal. 447 (California Supreme Court, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Colo. L. Rep. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamison-v-san-jose-santa-clara-r-r-cal-1880.