Kyne v. Southern Pacific Co.

126 P. 311, 41 Utah 368, 1912 Utah LEXIS 68
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1912
DocketNo. 2350
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 126 P. 311 (Kyne v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kyne v. Southern Pacific Co., 126 P. 311, 41 Utah 368, 1912 Utah LEXIS 68 (Utah 1912).

Opinion

STRAUP, J.

Tbis is an action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained1 through the defendants’ negligence. A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff. The defendants appeal.

The assignments relate to the admission of certain evidence, the court’s refusal to direct a verdict in the defendants’ favor, and to1 the charge.

The accident occurred ait Lakeside, a station in Box Elder County on the west shore of the Great Salt Lake on the defendant company’s main line. The residents of the station consisted of ten or fifteen families and about 300 men, employees of the defendant Southern Pacific Company. The plaintiff was between ten and eleven years of age. Her father was in the employ of the company and with his family resided at Lakeside. At that place there were three tracks running east and west. The main track was about thirty feet north of the depot. Between that track and the depot were two other tracks, one of them a passing track, and the other leading to a quarry about a quarter of a. mile away, where the company was engaged in quarrying, and where plaintiff’s father was employed as a powderman. At Lakeside a boarding house and bunkhouses of the employees were on the north side of the tracks, and the houses of families on the north and south side. The house of the plaintiff’s father was on the north side> about 300 yards west of the depot. The country at Lakeside is very arid, and without water for drinking and culinary purposes. The company supplied its employees and those residing at Lakeside with water, and for [371]*371tbait purpose maiutaiued a large tank east of the depot and south of the tracks, which it kept filled with water transported by it from Lemay, about thirty miles away. A pipe line from the tank to the boarding house supplied the boarding house with water. Those of the families living in separate houses got water direct from the tank and carried it to their houses. The station and tracks were unfenced, and persons on the north side of the tracks, in going to and from the tank and depot, were obliged to cross the tracks. Plaintiffs father testified:

“In passing from my home to the depot, we used to use the pathway between the two tracks, the main line track and the one that the quarry came up and down on. We had to cross the tracks going south. We would go about 160 yards east; then the path turns south and terminated at the depot. During the time I lived there, we obtained water from the tank at the depot on the south side of the railroad tracks. During the time I lived there, I carried water from this well to the house noon and evening, when I came off work. I carried it in two buckets. I was then in the employ of the Southern Pacific Company as a powderman, blasting boulders too large to- be handled by the steam shovel. I would come in to nay noonday meal on the work train, and had been doing that for over a year. Before the 5th day of April, 1910 (the day of the accident), I had been in the habit of getting the water when I came in at noon in buckets left'at the well by Nora (the plaintiff). She went to the well probably twice every day from December, 1909, until she got hurt. I also obtained the water every evening. Nora brought me the buckets. After getting the water, we would cross the tracks, then go straight west until I came to another trail, and then go up over the hill and go. home. On the day of the accident, I was at the quarry blasting. It was between twelve and one o’clock, and I was working during the noon hour. When I got through working (that day he did not come down on the work train as usual), I came down about half past twelve, and saw a crowd running out toward the depot.”

[372]*372Tbe work train wbicb caused tbe injury came in from tbe quarry from tbe west. Tbe first car as it approached was tbe caboose, then a water car, tben tbe engine, tben a fiat car. Tbe train stopped near tbe depot. There tbe train crew and tbe employees coming from tbe quarry left it and went to lunch at tbe boarding bouse. Shortly thereafter tbe defendant Jensen, tbe switch foreman of tbe work train, and who bad direction and control over it, alone boarded tbe engine, and, without assistance and without signals or warning, ran and operated tbe train to a switch to tbe east of tbe depot, and there switched tbe train to' another track, and, without warning or signals of its approach, ran it back towards tbe west on another track and struck tbe plaintiff, who was standing near tbe south rail of that track, and near tbe depot, looking towards tbe west for her father. Tbe plaintiff testified that she took tbe buckets to tbe depot for her father, and “when I got there I set tbe buckets down in front of tbe depot, and went to Healy’s (near by) to get some salt. I got.the salt and came back to tbe depot. I saw tbe train when it came in. Tbe train stopped. I saw tbe fireman and engineer get off. I knew them. My brother went around to tbe pump (tank) with tbe buckets to fill them. When I gave the buckets to my brother, I was on tbe side next to the tracks. I tben went close up to tbe track tó' look for Papa, because he bad not come in on that train. I was, I guess, three or four feet from tbe depot building. When I first saw tbe train, it was about fifty or sixty feet towards tbe quarry from tbe depot, and was standing still. I did not see it after that. • A flat car struck me on tbe breast, and dragged me about twenty or thirty feet. I was on tbe ground while being dragged. I did not see whether a train was moving before I got back from Healy’s. I went within one foot of tbe track. Before reaching that point, I did not look to see if a train was coming. I listened for a train. I looked westerly to see if a train was coming from that direction, but not easterly. I stayed in the place where tbe car struck mie three or four minutes. When my brother went to get tbe water, I was close to- tbe depot; but I did not have [373]*373any conversation with. him. I did not bear any whistle sounded at tbe time tbe train moved from tbe place where my brother got off tbe engine. I was behind tbe freight depot when tbe train stopped; but I saw it when my brother got off. It stopped towards tbe quarry from tbe boarding bouse. I could not see tbe train on account of coal cars and tbe thing they bad there to load coal on engines with. But these objects were not between me and tbe train at tbe time tbe men were getting off. I know that tbe train was moved. I know where it always went when it came in; it bad to switch in for coal, and went down on that track for a little ways below tbe depot towards tbe lake, and then it bad to come up on another track. That is the way that train always took on coal.” Her foot was run over and amputated back of tbe toes.

Her brother testified that when tbe train came in be saw bis sister; that be got off tbe train, took tbe buckets, and “went around tbe comer to tbe pump. I pumped tbe water and started back to where my sister was. I saw her being dragged as I came around tbe comer. She was lying on her back. She was next to tbe flat ear, her bead towards tbe depot. I did not bear any bell or whistle, I became aware for tbe first time that tbe train was in that locality when I turned around with my buckets, because I bad not beard it make any noise up to that time. It was moving about as fast as I could run. When I saw my sister, I dropped the buckets and ran toward tbe engine and gave the stop' signal to Jensen. I hollered to him. He was running tbe engine. He was in where the engineer sits when be runs tbe engine, on tbe north side, kind of kneeling down on tbe seat. I did not see any one else except Jensen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 311, 41 Utah 368, 1912 Utah LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyne-v-southern-pacific-co-utah-1912.