Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Tietken

68 N.W. 336, 49 Neb. 130, 1896 Neb. LEXIS 697
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1896
DocketNo. 6714
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 68 N.W. 336 (Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Tietken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Tietken, 68 N.W. 336, 49 Neb. 130, 1896 Neb. LEXIS 697 (Neb. 1896).

Opinion

Ryan, C.

In this action, which was brought in the .district court of Otoe county, plaintiff recovered judgment on the verdict of a jury in the sum of $2,500. He alleged in his petition that about October 9, 1890, he shipped over the defendant’s road certain live stock from Scio to Chicago; that the train by which the shipment was made stopped at Weeping Water and, as plaintiff was informed by the [134]*134conductor, twenty minutes would be allowed plaintiff for obtaining a meal; that before said twenty minutes bad expired said conductor suddenly and excitedly called out to plaintiff that be must immediately get on tbe train or be left; that said train was at tbe time moving slowly and that plaintiff, by reason of believing, relying upon, and attempting to obey tbe order of said conductor, attempted to board said train moving at a rate of speed unknown to plaintiff, and that, OAving to tbe wrongful acts and negligence of tbe defendant, plaintiff was thrown in such a manner that tbe wheels of tbe cars of said train passed over plaintiff’s right foot, necessitating its amputation, and over tbe large toe of tbe left foot, whereby its amputation was also rendered necessary. These averments were supplemented by averments of tbe damage caused which tbe defendant bad refused to' pay. By its answer tbe railroad company denied tbe above averments and charged that tbe injuries of plaintiff were attributable to bis own negligence. This charge of negligence was denied by plaintiff in bis reply.

Tbe questions presented by these error proceedings are, first, was tbe railroad company guilty of negligence, and second, was tbe defendant in error guilty of contributory negligence? It has been repeatedly held by this court that issues as to negligence and contributory negligence, where tbe evidence is so conflicting that from it different minds might draw different conclusions, must be determined by tbe jury. (Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Wilgus, 40 Neb., 660; Omaha & R. V. R. Co. v. Morgan, 40 Neb., 604.) As tbe jury found in favor of tbe defendant in error, we shall assume as established such pleaded facts as tbe evidence-upon bis behalf justified tbe jury in finding, without undertaking to set out tbe proofs submitted in rebuttal.

Tbe defendant in error, when be made bis shipment at Scio, received from tbe railroad company a contract which entitled him to free transportation in the caboose of the train whereby said shipment was made, that be [135]*135might in transit give his stock snch attention as circumstances might demand. Indorsed on this contract were the following provisions: “We, the undersigned persons in charge of the live stock mentioned in the within contract, in consideration of the free pass granted us by the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and of the other, covenants and agreements contained in said contract, including the rules and regulations at the head hereof and those printed on the back hereof, all which for the consideration aforesaid are hereby accepted by us and made a part of this, our contract, and all the terms and conditions of which we hereby agree to observe and be severally bound by, do hereby expressly agree that during the time we are in charge of said stock, and while we are on our return passage, we shall be deemed employes of said company for the purposes in said contract stated, and that we do agree to assume, and do hereby assume, all risks incident to snch employment, and that said company shall in no case be liable to us for any injury or damages sustained by us during such time for which it would not be liable to its regular employes.” Notwithstanding the above quoted language the defendant in error was, for certain purposes, a passenger. His contractual right was to proceed upon the freight train upon which his cattle were being shipped. His duty was to care for his stock in transit, and his rights and privileges were limited by the necessity of traveling upon the aforesaid freight train and by the requirement that he must care for his stock. (Omaha & R. V. R. Co. v. Crow, 47 Neb., 84.) It was not inconsistent with any undertaking or obligation of the defendant in error for him to stop at a lunch stand to obtain a necessary meal, as was done in this case with the approval of the conductor. The theory of the defendant in error, in support of which there was such evidence that we cannot ignore the action of the jury thereon, was that while the defendant in error was eating, the conductor, in a hurried and excited manner, called out to him that he must immedi[136]*136ately get on board the train or, if he did not, he would be left at Weeping Water and could not accompany his stock; that at once the defendant in error accordingly hurried to the train, which was moving, as the defendant in error thought, at a low rate of speed; that the part of the. train which he reached was quite a distance ahead of the caboose; that by reason of the increase of the rate of speed of the train and the certainty that the caboose when it reached defendant in error would be moving quite rapidly, and because of the urgent directions of the conductor to get aboard at once, the defendant in error, that he might not lose his right of free transportation with his stock, was induced to climb the ladder on the side of the nearest freight car, but that by the slipping of the feet of the defendant in error he was thrown to the ground in such a Avay that the injury in his petition described was unavoidable. It is vigorously insisted that it was negligence, per se, for the defendant in error to attempt to climb the side of a freight car moving as was the one he attempted to board. The evidence adduced by the plaintiff in error very strongly tended to show that it was a very hazardous undertaking for one who did not understand his business, as it was expressed, to attempt the performance of the feat indicated, and this proposition is now asserted and reasserted in argument. We may therefore confidently assume that if the conductor urged the defendant in error to take this very course, the railroad company should not now be heard to assert that this was not negligence on the part of its conductor. It was testified by defendant in error that the train seemed to him to be moving at such a rate of speed that he could with safety to himself catch hold of the ladder and climb up the moving box car, and that he was impelled to do this by the peremptory directions given him by the conductor. It is evident from the verdict that these statements were accepted by the jury as truthful. While it has been held by this court that the acceptance of the right to ride upon the same train with [137]*137his stock free of charge for the purpose of giving snch stock necessary attention, of necessity imposes upon the owner the incurring of such risks and inconveniences as result from such undertakings on his part, it has never been held that in other respects railroad companies as common carriers are exonerated from responsibilities with respect to this class of passengers. By an instruction as favorable to the railroad company as could reasonably be asked the jury was told that ordinarily it is negligence for a passenger to attempt to board a moving train and that it is not sufficient to rebut such presumption of negligence to show that the trainmen acquiesced or directed him to make the attempt.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad v. Troyer
97 N.W. 308 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1903)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Call Publishing Co.
78 N.W. 519 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1899)
Omaha & Republican Valley Railway Co. v. Crow
74 N.W. 1066 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1898)
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. McCarty
68 N.W. 633 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 N.W. 336, 49 Neb. 130, 1896 Neb. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-railway-co-v-tietken-neb-1896.