Oregon Short Line Railroad v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co.

237 P. 281, 41 Idaho 4, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 72
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 237 P. 281 (Oregon Short Line Railroad v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oregon Short Line Railroad v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co., 237 P. 281, 41 Idaho 4, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 72 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

GIVENS, J.

— -This action was instituted by appellant to recover $3,045.67 as damages alleged to have been occasioned to a locomotive, roadbed and equipment in consequence of the engine having been derailed by a large rock encountered on the track in a cut a slight distance east of Glenns Ferry, Idaho, June 4, 1921, which rock, it is claimed, came on the track in consequence of an employee of the defendant telephone company dislodging the same in the course of his employment, when proceeding, and so he could continue, in an automobile on an abandoned road on the hillside parallel with and approximately 200 feet above the tracks, the slope between being about one to one; that the telephone company’s employee negligently and in reckless disregard of the railroad company’s rights rolled the rock down the hillside, which allegations were denied by the telephone company.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant offering no testimony, each side respectively moved for an instructed verdict in their favor and respondent’s motion was granted, to which ruling appellant excepted. Thereafter a motion for a new trial was made, which was denied and the present appeal taken therefrom.

Appellant assigns as error the action of the court in directing the verdict in favor of defendant and in denying *7 appellant’s motion for a directed verdict and in overruling the motion for a new trial.

Neither immediately after both parties had asked for an instructed verdict nor after the court had granted respondent’s request for a directed verdict did appellant request that the matter be submitted to the jury.

It is to be noted that appellant does not complain because the court did not present the case to the jury, only that the court improperly granted respondent’s request instead of appellant’s request for an instructed verdict.

The only testimony adduced by appellant with reference to how the rock came to be on the track except as to marks indicating it had rolled down the hill, or who or what caused it to roll, was given by the employee of the telephone company, who drove the automobile referred to. He stated he stopped his car as he was going up the road because there were some rocks piled in the road, and in response to the question, “After you had stopped your car for a brief time you again got in and resumed your driving and went on toward the trouble,” he answered, “Yes, sir.....Possibly a quarter or half a mile,” and further stated that when he returned later he found that the train had run into a rock and been damaged, and that he had driven the road many times.

“Here, both parties, on the termination of the evidence in the case, made similar requests, — the plaintiff for a verdict in its favor, and the defendants for a verdict in their favor; both parties in this way voluntarily submitting the case to the court for its determination upon the evidence. In Beutell v. Magone, 157 U. S. 154, 15 Sup. Ct. 566, 39 L. ed. 654, where like requests had been made, the justice delivering the opinion says: ‘This was necessarily a request that the court find the facts, and the parties are therefore concluded by the findings by the court, upon which the resulting verdict was given.’ In Thompson v. Simpson, 128 N. Y. 270, 28 N. E. 627, where, upon the conclusion of the evidence, each party had asked the court to direct a verdict in his favor, and the court thereupon directed a verdict for the *8 defendant, the court said: ‘The effect of a request by each party for a verdict in his favor clothed the court with the function of a jury, and it is well settled that in such case, where the party whose request is denied, does not thereupon request to go to the jury upon the facts, a verdict directed for either party stands as would the finding of a jury for the same party in the absence of any direction; and the review in this court is governed by the same rules as in ordinary cases rendered without direction. ’ ’ The question seems new in this state, and is so possibly from the fact that it will seldom happen that at the close of the evidence each party will move the court for the direction of a verdict in his favor. But it seems comformable to reason that, where it is done, each party must have intended to submit the case to the court for its finding upon the facts as well as the law; and when, as in this case, the party against whom the verdict is rendered does not ask to have the case submitted to the jury, he cannot be heard to say there was error because there was some evidence tending to support the issue in his favor. In such ease the finding of the jury in accordance with the instruction of the court should be given the same consideration as if it had been rendered without such instruction. See, also, the following cases: Trustees v. Vail, 151 N. Y. 463, 467, 45 N. E. 1030; Clason v. Baldwin, 152 N. Y. 204, 46 N. E. 322; Mascott v. Insurance Co., 69 Vt. 116, 37 Atl. 255; New England Mortg. Security Co. v. Great Western Elevator Co., 6 N. D. 407, 71 N. W. 130.

The question, then, presented by the record is, not whether there was any evidence to support the plaintiff’s claim, but whether, upon the evidence adduced, the finding should have been for the defendant. And the question must be determined as if the case had been submitted to the jury upon the issues joined, without a direction to return a verdict for the defendant; for it is in fact the finding of the court upon the evidence submitted to it by the act of the parties that is to be reviewed, and not whether there was some evidence tending to support the plaintiff’s claim; for, as already observed, the omission of the plaintiff, after *9 the court had directed a verdict for the defendant, to ask it to submit the ease to the jury, must be taken as a waiver of its right to have the jury pass upon the evidence. And it is more than probable that this was not a mere oversight, and that it was omitted for the reason it is probable the jury would have rendered the same verdict the court had already directed on the motion of the plaintiff. "Was, then, the verdict rendered upon the instruction of the court so clearly against the weight of the evidence that it should be set aside, and a new trial granted?” (First Nat. Bank v. Hayes, 64 Ohio St. 100, 59 N. E. 893.)

The above statement is clear and concise as to the rule to be applied in the case herein and is supported by the overwhelming weight of authority as appears from, among others, the following: Vinson v. Wooten, 163 Ark. 170, 259 S. W. 366; A. M. Collins Mfg. Co. v. Lawrence County Bank, 164 Ark. 133, 261 S. W. 27; Continental Casualty Co. v. Klinge (Ind. App.), 144 N. E. 246; Pearlman v. Snitzer (Neb.), 198 N. W. 879; Goings v. Davis (Ind. App.), 141 N. E. 473, 143 N. E. 174; Splain v. Goodrich Rubber Co., 290 Fed. 275, 53 App. D. C. 300; Union Electric Steel Co. v. Imperial Bank of Canada, 286 Fed. 857; Cascade Auto Co. v. Petter, 72 Colo. 570, 212 Pac. 823; Richman v. Mulcahy and Gibson, 269 Fed. 786; Mulcahy and Gibson v. Richman, 265 Fed. 733; Security Life Ins. Co. v. Bates, 144 Ark. 345, 222 S. W. 740;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P. 281, 41 Idaho 4, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oregon-short-line-railroad-v-mountain-states-telephone-telegraph-co-idaho-1925.