Rodgers v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

88 P. 885, 75 Kan. 222, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1907
DocketNo. 14,886
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 88 P. 885 (Rodgers v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodgers v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 88 P. 885, 75 Kan. 222, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 44 (kan 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

Plaintiff sued the railroad company for the value of a car-load of corn. The right to recover was predicated upon the defendant’s negligence. The corn was delivered to the company at Frankfort, on May 22, 1903, for transportation and delivery to the plaintiff’s agent at Kansas City, Mo. The loaded car stood on the track at Frankfort until May 28, when it was hauled to its destination, only to be overtaken and destroyed by the unprecedented flood of May 30, 1903. The delay .was protracted through the negligent omission of the company to move the car. The flood was an act of God. The district court rendered judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff prosecutes error.

If the fundamental principles of legal liability for negligence are to be regarded, the judgment of the district court is correct. The maxim is: “In jure non remota causa, sed próxima, spectatur.” If a carrier be guilty of negligence not in itself harmful, but wrongful only because of injurious consequences which may [223]*223follow, and a new cause intervene between such negligence and the injury complained of, which new cause is not a consequence of the original negligence, which reasonable prudence on the part of the original wrongdoer could not have anticipated, and but for which the injury- could not have happened, the new cause is the proximate cause and the original negligence is disregarded as not affecting the final result.

Carriers do not assume the risk of loss caused by the act of God.

Sir Frederick Pollock, a man admirably fitted by temperament, learning and literary skill to do so, has summed up the law relating to proximate cause, as established by the judicial wisdom of England, in his book on Torts. He develops the essential principles in the following eminently scientific way:

“We shall now consider for what consequences of his acts and defaults a man is liable. When complaint is made that one person has caused harm to another, the first question is whether .his act was really the cause of that harm in a sense upon which the law can take action. The harm or loss may be traceable to his act, but the connection may be, in the accustomed phrase, too remote. The maxim ‘in jure non remota, causa sed próxima, spectatur’ is Englished in Bacon’s constantly cited gloss: ‘It were infinite for the law to judge the causes of causes, and their impulsions one of another; therefore it contenteth itself with the immediate cause, and judgeth of acts by that, without looking to any further degree.’ Liability must be founded on an act which is the ‘immediate cause’ of harm or of injury to a right. . . . The meaning of the term ‘immediate cause’ is not capable of perfect cr general definition. Even if it had an ascertainable logical meaning, which is more than doubtful, it would not follow that the legal meaning is the same. In fact, our maxim only points out that some consequences are held too remote to be counted. What is the test of remoteness we still have to inquire. The view which I shah endeavor to justify is that, for the purpose of civil liability, those consequences, and those only, are deemed ‘immediate,’ ‘proximate,’ or, to anticipate a lit-[224]*224tie, ‘natural and probable,’ which a person of average competence and knowledge, being in the like case with the person whose conduct is complained of, and having the like opportunities of observation, might be expected to foresee as likely to follow upon such conduct. . . . This principle is commonly expressed in the maxim that ‘a man is presumed to intend the natural consequence of his acts’; or, in the terms of a judicial statement, ‘a party must be considered, in point of law, to intend that which is the necessary and natural consequence of that which he does.’ . . . Although we do not care whether the man intended the particular consequence or not, we have in mind such consequences as he might have intended, or, without exactly intending them, contemplated as possible; so that it would not be absurd to infer as a fact that he either did mean them to ensue, or recklessly put aside the risk of some such consequences ensuing. This is the limit introduced by such terms as ‘natural’ — or, more fully, ‘natural and probable’ — consequences. . . . The doctrine of ‘natural and probable consequence’ is most clearly illustrated, however, in the law of negligence. For there the substance of the wrong itself is failure to act with due foresight; it has been defined as ‘the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided upon those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or doing something which a prudent and' reasonable man would not do.’ Now a' reasonable man can be guided only by a reasonable estimate of probabilities. If men went about to guard themselves against every risk to themselves or others which might by ingenious conjecture be conceived as possible, human affairs could not be carried on at all. The reasonable man, then, to whose ideal behavior we are to look as the standard of duty, will neither neglect what he can forecast as probable, nor waste his anxiety on events that are barely possible. He will order his precaution by the measure of what appears likely in the known course of things. This being the standard, it follows that if in a particular case (not being within certain special and more stringent rules) the harm complained of is not such as a reasonable man in the defendant’s place should have foreseen as likely to happen, there is no wrong and no liability. And the statement proposed, though not positively laid down, in Greenland v. Chaplin, namely, ‘that a person is expected to an[225]*225ticipate and guard against all reasonable consequences, but that he is not, by the law of England, expected to anticipate and guard against that which no reasonable man would expect to occur,'’ appears to contain the only rule tenable on principle where the liability is founded solely on negligence. ‘Mischief which could by no possibility have been foreseen, and which no reasonable person would have anticipated/ may be the ground of legal compensation under some rule of exceptional severity; and such rules, for various reasons, exist; but under an ordinary rule of due care and caution it cannot be taken into account.” (Pollock, Torts, 6th ed., 28, 30, 83, 34, 39.)

■A similar service has been performed for the jurisprudence of the United States by Thomas M. Cooley. Under the title “Proximate and Remote Cause” he says:

“It is not only requisite that damage, actual or inferential, should be suffered, but this damage must be the legitimate sequence of the thing amiss. The maxim of the law here applicable is that in law the immediate and not the remote cause of any event is regarded; and in the application of it the law rejects, as not constituting the foundation for an action, that damage which does not flow proximately from the act complained of. In other words, the law always refers the injury to the proximate, not to the remote, cause. The explanation 'of this maxim may be given thus: If an' injury has resulted in consequence of a certain wrongful act or omission, but only through or by means of some intervening cause, from which last cause the injury followed as a direct and immediate consequence, the law will refer the damage to the last or proximate cause, and refuse to trace it to that which was more remote.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P. 885, 75 Kan. 222, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodgers-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-kan-1907.