Lakin v. Oregon Pacific Railroad

15 P. 641, 15 Or. 220, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 71
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 15 P. 641 (Lakin v. Oregon Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakin v. Oregon Pacific Railroad, 15 P. 641, 15 Or. 220, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 71 (Or. 1887).

Opinions

ThaybR, J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court for the county of Benton, recovered in an action in said court, brought by the respondent against the appellant on account of damages for personal injuries received while a passenger upon the appellant’s line of railroad, en route from Yaquina City to Corvallis, in said county, alleged to have been occasioned through the appellant’s negligence. The case was tried in the Circuit Court by jury, and resulted in a verdict for the respondent for the sum of $1,650. The grounds of theappeal arealleged errors in the rulings of the court made during the trial, and in the instructions given to the jury. The following is the gravamen of the complaint: “That while the plaintiff was such passenger at or near the station called 'The Summit,’ on the line of said railroad, a collision occurred by running the engine or locomotive of said railroad against the passenger ears while said passenger cars were detached from said engine or locomotive, and while the said passenger cars were standing on the track of said railroad, with such force that the said plaintiff was precipitated forward and thrown down on said cars, whereby the plaintiff was badly wounded, bruised, and injured about her person, and put in imminent danger of her life; and plaintiff was for a long time confined, and unable to attend to her usual business, and is yet, and has sustained permanent injury, and was obliged to, and did, pay large sums of money for doctoring and attendance, to wit, the sum of three hundred dollars; that the said collision was caused by the negligence of the defendant and its servants.” This was denied by the answer, and the following matter alleged therein: “That on the said thirty-first day of August, 1885, near the Summit station, on the railroad mentioned in the complaint, in Benton County, Oregon, the defendant was causing a train of cars to pass over said railroad from Yaquina City to Corvallis, Oregon, upon which train the plaintiff was a passenger, and that at said Summit station said train was halted and stopped for dinner, and that while said train was 'So stopped and halted to enable the passengers to get dinner at said Summit station, one C. E. Blackburn, who was at said time not in the service or employ of the defendant, wrongfully, and without the authority or con[222]*222sent of tbe defendant, detached, and caused the locomotive to be detached and uncoupled from the passenger cars, and moved said locomotive along the track some distance from said passenger cars, and that in attempting to return said locomotive to its place and connect the same to the said passenger cars the collision mentioned in the complaint happened, and not otherwise; and that the same happened without the consent or knowledge of the defendant or its servants, or either of them, and that said Blackburn, at said time, was not in the employ of the defendant, and never had been, and that his act in uncoupling said train and separating said locomotive from the passenger cars, and in attempting to return the same to its place, and in causing said collision, was without the knowledge or consent of the defendant, and the same was wrongful on the part of said Blackburn.” The answer also alleged that plaintiff contributed to the alleged injury by leaving the cars of defendant while they were stopped, and returning to them .while the engine was detached, without the knowledge of the defendant or its servants, and carelessly and negligently entered said cars before she was notified or requested so to do, add before the alleged collision occurred, and by so doing contributed to said injury, and that said alleged injury would not have occurred but for the said carelessness and negligence of said respondent.

This reference to the pleadings shows pretty conclusively that the relevant testimony in the case was confined to narrow limits. The general facts evidently are not controverted. It may reasonably be inferred from the pleadings that the respondent was a passenger upon the appellant’s train of cars as alleged in the complaint; that the train stopped near the Summit station upon the line of the road; that the locomotive was there detached, and run out on the line of the road to a point beyond the Summit towards Corvallis, was then run back to be coupled to the passenger cars again, and, in the act of effecting such purpose, produced a collision which resulted in the injury of the respondent. It is claimed upon the part of the appellant, as will be seen from the portion of its answer, to which reference has been made, that it was in nowise responsible for the collision men[223]*223tioned, but that it was produced by the wrongful intermeddling of said C. E. Blackburn with the company’s locomotive engine and train of cars. The appellant denies any negligence in the affair, upon the grounds, I suppose, that the act was not its act, but the act of an interloper with whom the company had no relations whatever. This, and the alleged negligence of the respondent, seem to be the main grounds of the defense to the action. Both of the grounds were mainly matters of fact for the jury to determine. If the injury was occasioned by the wrongful acts of a stranger, the railroad company ought not to be held responsible for it, unless the company in some way countenanced the acts so as to make them its own. There was evidence in the case tending to show that said Blackburn was employed as engineer, and sent out on the train upon which the accident occurred by one Fordyce to learn the road between Yaquina City and the Summit.

Charles Meeker, the locomotive engineer on the train, testified that he got orders from the train dispatcher, Mr. Fordyce, to take Blackburn upon the engine “to learn him” the road between the two places; and Blackburn himself swore that lie was sent out by Mr. Fordyce from Yaquina City as engineer at said time; that he supposed Mr. Fordyce to be acting as train dispatcher, or superintendent, or something of that kind, he did not know what; that at the time the instructions were given, Fordyce was at Yaquina City in the railroad office; that a great many persons were present at the time buying tickets; that Meeker was there. The instructions were that Blackburn should get on the engine No. 2 with Meeker, the engineer, and proceed to the Summit; that upon arriving at the Summit he was to take charge of No. 2 engine, and work with it there until Meeker returned from Corvallis; Meeker was to take another engine run by a man by the name of Brown, and proceed to Corvallis; that when he, Blackburn, arrived at the Summit, he would receive his running orders; that after receiving from Fordyce the instructions he got on the engine with Meeker. He further testified, in substance, that after getting upon the engine they left Yaquina, and ran along with the train to Chit-wood water-tank; that after leaving there, Meeker asked him to [224]*224take the engine and run it; that he took hold of the engine, and Meeker went back on the train among the passengers; that after running along to within two or three miles of Nashville, Meeker came back, and he, Blackburn, asked him to take the engine; the former said: “No, you are doing well, go ahead.” Meeker finally resumed running the train, and after they got to the Summit there was some conversation about dinner between Meeker, the fireman, and some one; that Meeker got off the car and mingled with the people, and he, Blackburn, remained on the engine some time; a few minutes after, a man he thought was Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 P. 641, 15 Or. 220, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakin-v-oregon-pacific-railroad-or-1887.