Martin v. Southern Pacific Co.

88 P. 701, 150 Cal. 124, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 207
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1906
DocketS.F. No. 3566.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 88 P. 701 (Martin v. Southern Pacific Co.) 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
Martin v. Southern Pacific Co., 88 P. 701, 150 Cal. 124, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 207 (Cal. 1906).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This action was brought by plaintiffs, the wife and minor children of Joseph Martin, to recover damages for his death, claimed to have been caused by the negligence of defendant in the operation of its railroad.

This appeal is taken by the defendant from the order granting plaintiffs a new trial after a judgment of nonsuit had been entered against them upon the trial of the action in the court below.

The accident resulting in the death of Martin occurred at a crossing next to the town of Irvington, in Alameda County, on September 6, 1894. The railroad track at this point runs north and south, and is intersected by a road known as the Mission road, running east and west. The Mission road is sixty-six feet wide. The right of way of the defendant is sixty feet wide, the main line of track being located in the middle of it, the rails being a fraction over twenty-seven feet from the east-and-west lines of the right of way. On the corner formed by the intersection of the easterly line of the right of way and the northerly line of the Mission road is located what is lmown as Vollmer’s warehouse, which extends about one hundred feet northerly along the right of way, and easterly about one hundred and fifty feet on the Mission road. Further north of Vollmer’s, and also on the edge of the right of way, is located another warehouse. In front of these warehouses, and between them and the main-line track, was a switch or siding which extended some five hundred feet north of the crossing. The platforms of said warehouses, which were four and a half feet in height, extended westerly so as *126 to reach the floors of box-cars stationed on the switch, the platform to the north being much wider than the Yollmer platform, in order'to meet the curve of the switch as it joined the main track. The distance from the corner of Yollmer’s warehouse to the nearest rail of this side-track was twenty-nine feet four inches, and from the center of the near rail of said side-track to the nearest rail of the main track the distance was twelve feet eleven inches. At the time of the accident there were several freight box-cars of defendant—the evidence is uncertain as to the number—standing on said siding, one of these extending some distance into the Mission road. These box-cars were from thirty-four to forty feet long, extended two feet beyond the rails of the side-track, and stood next the platform in front of Yollmer’s warehouse.

The deceased was a farmer and teamster, a man of good hearing and eyesight, who had been accustomed for several years to drive teams on the road over this crossing where he was fatally injured. On the afternoon of the day of the accident he was driving a team of heavy horses harnessed to an empty open-geared lumber-wagon, and was sitting astride on the reach near the center, at least eleven feet from the front end of the wagon-pole. The reach of the wagon stood two and one-half feet from the ground and the deceased was a man about five feet nine inches in height. He had driven from the town of Mission San Jose down-grade toward Irving-ton and this railroad-crossing westerly on the Mission road at a slow trot. When some two hundred and fifty feet from defendant’s right of way the evidence shows that his view of defendant’s track was practically obscured by trees and buildings, including the warehouses mentioned above. As deceased came down about the corner, or close to the corner, of Yollmer’s warehouse on the defendant’s right of way (the exact spot seems to have been indicated by a witness on some diagram used on the trial, which diagram is not in the record), he stopped his team and sat in the attitude of one listening. How long he so remained does not appear. It does appear, ho'wever, that, though he stopped to listen, he did not look or attempt to look either at this point or at any other time after he started toward the crossing, although there was evidence that through the space between the warehouse and the box-cars on the switch, something over seven feet, an observa *127 tion might be had by a person standing in the Mission road along defendant’s track for some two thousand feet northerly in the direction of Niles. After stopping to listen, deceased started his team into a walk towards the crossing, going very slowly up a raise in the road approaching it. As he • cleared the box-car, which was extending into the Mission road on the siding, he looked down the track, discovered the train, immediately whipped up his team, which was on the main track at the time, and endeavored to clear it. The train, however, struck the hind wheel of the wagon, threw him from it, and in the fall he sustained injuries which caused his death. The train which collided with the wagon of deceased was a special freight-train, and there was evidence in the case tending to show that no bell or whistle or other signal was given of the approach of the train towards the crossing, and that it approached it on a descending grade at the rate of from thirty-five to forty miles an hour.

With this statement of the general features of the evidence, we approach the merits of the appeal, calling attention to other items of evidence as we proceed.

The only question in the case is whether, upon the evidence, the court was warranted in holding, as a matter of law, that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence in approaching' the crossing. While originally so holding, upon the motion for a nonsuit, the trial court was satisfied upon a more ' particular consideration of the evidence upon the motion for a new trial that the question of deceased’s contributory negligence was properly for the jury, and we think this conclusion was correct.

In granting the nonsuit, as it appears from the grounds of defendant’s motion therefor, the court was of the opinion that the evidence showed that while defendant, when near the crossing, listened for an approaching train, he was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to look northerly along the track when he reached the comer of Vollmer’s warehouse on defendant’s right of way, from which point, as we have said, there was evidence that the track could have been seen for two thousand feet. And the court must have assumed in this connection that the testimony showed that had the deceased so looked at this point he would have discovered the approaching train.

*128 There can be no question but the law is well -settled in this state that a traveler upon a highway approaching a crossing must take all reasonable precautions to ascertain whether a train is approaching. In this regard the imperative duty is cast upon him to listen carefully and to look carefully at the most available and convenient distance from the track from which an observation of it can be made, and when the act of listening and looking may be reasonably effective, that notwithstanding the employees operating a train may be guilty of negligence in failing to give the statutory signals or warnings of its approach to a crossing, still if at a convenient point near the track a traveler could have discovered the approach of the train by the exercise of his senses of hearing and sight, .and hence avoided the danger in which he placed himself, his failure to do so will constitute contributory negligence precluding a recovery from those who are equally negligent with himself. (Herbert v. Southern Pacific Co., 121 Cal. 227, [53 Pac. 651]; Green v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P. 701, 150 Cal. 124, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-southern-pacific-co-cal-1906.