Lowden v. Van Meter

1937 OK 647, 73 P.2d 424, 181 Okla. 210, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 9, 1937
DocketNo. 27033.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1937 OK 647 (Lowden v. Van Meter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowden v. Van Meter, 1937 OK 647, 73 P.2d 424, 181 Okla. 210, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 101 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This case presents an appeal from a judgment rendered in the district court of Pittsburg county against these named defendants, in the amount of $1,500, for damages for personal injuries sustained in an accident in which one of the defendants’ trains allegedly, by reason of the careless and negligent operation, ran over this plaintiff. We shall refer to the parties as they appeared in the trial court.

In his petition the plaintiff alleged that on the night of September 29, 1934, he was walking home from the town of Hartshorne, where he had gone to buy groceries. His route led him over the defendants’ track, which ran east and west, the crossing being by means of a footpath running from north to south across the track and right of way, which had long been used by the people in that vicinity as a method of travel. The track at this point was straight and vision was uninterrupted for several hundred feet.

Returning homeward after dark, the plaintiff started across the track by means of this footpath, but slipped and fell, striking his head in such a manner as to injure himself and be rendered unconscious. Momentarily realizing that he was in danger from an approaching train, he managed to partially remove himself from the track, but alleged that the engineer carelessly and negligently ran the train over him, crushing- his skull and permanently injuring him to such an extent that he is incapacitated and entirely unable to do manual labor. By reason of the alleged injury he asked $2,500 damages for the personal injuries so sustained, and $400 for medical services and expenses.

The defendants, on behalf of the railroad company, filed answers consisting of general denials and a plea of contributory negligence. At the close of the evidence, after the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict had been overruled, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff iu the amount of $1,500 damages for injurie^ and expenses incurred. From this judgment the defendants have appealed, offering four as-expenses incurred. From this judgment the These assignments of error are offered under four propositions, which we will discuss in the order in which they appear in the appeal brief.

The first proposition urged by the defendants as grounds for reversal is that there was no evidence that the train crew discovered the plaintiff in a perilous position in time to have avoided the accident. The plaintiff admits that he fell and injured his head sufficiently to be rendered unconscious, and his testimony was directed toward showing that while lying there the engineer negligently ran the train over him. There were no witnesses who testified that they saw the train strike the plaintiff, only his own testimony that the train hit him, after he had already fallen and injured himself. The testimony of the two boys who were a quarter of a mile or more away was that they saw something on the track, but this did not definitely establish that the object they saw was the plaintiff.

There was a total absence on the part of the plaintiff to show a failure on the part of the train crew of having exercised that degree of care commensurate with and demanded by the circumstances. The defendants owed the plaintiff the duty of not wantonly injuring him, and of keeping a reasonable lookout for anyone who might bo on. the track. But there is a complete and total failure by the plaintiff to establish this fact, and it was upon this that the plaintiff’s case necessarily had to be based.

In this connection it may be added that, while the defendants might have reasonably anticipated the presence of persons in the vicinity of this particular place, there existed no greater duty to keep a lookout for anyone who might be lying there. Unless it be shown that the engineer saw, or could have seen, this plaintiff by exercising a degree of care owed the plaintiff, but *212 which the engineer failed to exercise, there can be no recovery.

The defendants next set up the contention that where the evidence leaves the matter uncertain, and shows that one of two or more things could have caused the injury, for part of which the defendant is responsible and for part of which there is no responsibility, the jury is not to guess and find the negligence of the defendant was the real cause.

The evidence here certainly opens up the possibility of there having been two or more things which caused the injury. The plaintiff testified that he fell and injured his head so seriously that he became unconscious. Yet, while in this condition, he remembered positively that the train hit him and that it was the cause of the injury to his head. This raises the question that has often been passed upon by this court in the past, that question of the determination of the proximate cause of an injury from circumstantial evidence, where there is no direct and positive testimony. Supporting this position, the plaintiff offers authorities from this court, all holding that, in order to sustain a verdict, the circumstantial evidence so offered need not rise to that degree of certainty which will exclude every reasonable conclusion other than the one arrived at by the jury.

Such has been the holding of this court in numerous past decisions. However, this rule must be held to mean, not that any verdict which may be based upon circumstantial evidence should be sustained, but that a verdict based upon circumstantial evidence will be sustained only if the evidence is sufficient to determine the proximate cause of the injury, even though it does not exclude every other reasonable conclusion.

In the instant case the evidence not only fails to exclude other reasonable conclusions, but full consideration of the record discloses that it fails completely to bear out the plaintiff’s allegation that the negligence of the train crew was the proximate cause of the injury. The plaintiff’s duty was to make it appear more probable that the injury came, in whole or in part, from the defendants’ negligence than from any other cause. When the plaintiff failed to establish this, he failed to establish grounds sufficient to permit of recovery.

For the third ground of reversal the defendants offer that the duty to keep a lookout for the plaintiff and to exercise caution in relation to anyone who might be upon the track did not extend to anyone lying upon the track. It is obvious that it would take a greater degree of care to discover the presence of a man lying upon or near the track than it would be to see one walking thereon. It was never shown that the engineer saw the plaintiff. In fact, it is questioned that, lying on the track as he was, he could have been seen at all, without exercising a greater degree of care than could reasonably be demanded. Furthermore, the whistling upon which so much of the plaintiff’s case rested was not shown to have been directed toward the plaintiff. The inference that because the whistle was blown the engineer had seen the plaintiff and was sounding a warning to him is neither sufficient nor sufficiently strong to establish the plaintiff’s case. Still further, the circumstance of the plaintiff’s being found at such a distance from the crossing where persons were usually expected to be seen is something which cannot be overlooked. It is rather unusual for such evidence to be introduced without being contradicted or explained away, especially in view of the fact it was alleged and the proof was directed toward showing that the alleged injury occurred at a particular point on the track.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 647, 73 P.2d 424, 181 Okla. 210, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowden-v-van-meter-okla-1937.