Silcock v. Rio Grande Western Railway Co.

61 P. 565, 22 Utah 179, 1900 Utah LEXIS 19
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 P. 565 (Silcock v. Rio Grande Western Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silcock v. Rio Grande Western Railway Co., 61 P. 565, 22 Utah 179, 1900 Utah LEXIS 19 (Utah 1900).

Opinion

Bartch, C. J.

This action was brought to recover damages for injury to personal property, and for personal injuries, claimed to have been occasioned through the negligence of the defendant. It was, among other things, alleged in the complainant that the defendant, in disregard of its duty, failed to announce the arrival of its train, and carelessly, unlawfully and negligently ran and managed a locomotive and train belonging to it, on its track, crossing a public highway, and “that the same ran against and partially over said property,” killing a span of mares, and injuring other personal property and the plaintiff.

The defendant, in its answer, denied negligence on its part and charged that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which caused the injuries of which he complains.

From the testimony of the plaintiff, it appears that, on January 29, 1898, he went with his team to defendant’s railway station to purchase coal. When he arrived there he stopped his team at a point on the public road “twenty to thirty feet ” from the railway track, facing the same. He then applied the brake and tied the lines to his wagon, and went to the depot on the north side of the highway to arrange with the agent, for coal. The agent not being there, he stepped west across the track about sixty feet to the coal bins to ascertain if there was any coal to be had. While there he heard the rumbling of the incoming train, which was then close to the station, and hastened back to his team, got into the wagon and hold of the lines when his horses became frightened and unmanageable and collided with the train. The injuries resulted from the collision.

[185]*185The whistle on the engine was not blown nor the bell rung until immediately at the crossing. It was the northbound passenger train called the “Flyer,” running at a rate of fifty to sixty miles an hour. That train, according to plaintiff’s testimony, generally passed there somewhere “about a quarter to twelve,” but on this occasion it arrived about “half past twelve or a quarter to one.” The plaintiff had not noticed it come, but supposed it had gone. He testified that this particular train generally went through there rapidly — rapidly enough to probably frighten his team. He also testified that, on a previous occasion, with a load of beets, he stopped at the same place while the train was passing, sat in the wagon and held the team.

Such are substantially the material facts shown by the plaintiff’s testimony. After he rested his case, the defendant made a motion for a non-suit, upon the grounds that no negligence on the part of the defendant was shown, and that the evidence shows that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which contributed proximately to the injury. The motion was sustained, and the plaintiff appealed.

The decisive question presented is: Was the appellant guilty of such contributory negligence as prevents his recovery ? That is, assuming that the respondent was negligent in not sounding the whistle or ringing the bell at a proper distance from the public crossing, was the appellant guilty, as shown by his own evidence, of negligence, which contributed proximately and materially to the accident, so that, as matter of law, he cannot be permitted to recover ?

Due consideration of the facts and circumstances, appearing in evidence, impels the conclusion that this question must be answered in the affirmative. The proof leaves no room for doubt that if the appellant had pro[186]*186ceeded with ordinary care, about the railway station, he could have averted the accident. He was there on a pre--vious occasion with his team when the same. train passed at a rapid rate of speed, and knew that it was a fast train, and would probably frighten his horses in passing them. He knew about the usual time when it passed the crossing, and that it did not stop there, and although the regular, time for its arrival had passed, still he had not seen nor heard it pass on his way to the depot. Aware of these things, he had no right to assume that it had passed. He was chargeable with knowledge of the fact that the train might be late, and that it, or any other train might pass there at any time, the track on which the train was running, being the main line of the respondent’s system.

Under such circumstances, for the appellant to drive his' horses to within “twenty or thirty feet” of the track, and then leave them stand there on the highway alone, without being tied, and, without, so far as appears from the evidence, looking or listening for a train, go to the depot, thence to the coal shed sixty feet across the track, the team remaining all the while so untied, is, to say the least, culpable negligence. Suppose by the striking of the team the train had been derailed and some person killed, would not the act of thus carelessly leaving the team within twenty or thirty feet of the track, unattended, have' been characterized as gross negligence? Yet the more serious consequence would not have changed the character of the act. The appellant was bound to exercise ordinary care, and that, according to the facts disclosed, demanded that the team should be left at a greater distance from the track, or at least securely tied. Such care also required him to look and listen for an approaching train before and after leaving his team. No rule of law authorizes a person to thus recklessly leave his team upon the highway, [187]*187within a few feet of a railway track, unattended, and not even tied.

In Bunnell v. Railway Co., 13 Utah, 314, where the plaintiff had turned his cattle upon the highway in the vicinity of a railway track, unattended, and one of them was killed by a passing train, this court said: “A proper regard for the safety of humanity and of property forbids that a person, should turn his beasts, which can neither reason nor appreciate danger, out upon the highway, without a keeper, in the vicinity of a railway crossing; and especially is this true where such person knows that they must cross the track to get to the pasture where their instinct leads them. The sacredness of human life, and common sense, alike dictate this rule.”

Although he thus left his team upon the public highway, there is nothing in the testimony to show that the appellant either looked or listened for this or any train, either before or after arriving at the depot, until he heard the rumbling noise as the train approached, and yet it appears there was nothing to obscure his vision, and that one could see a quarter of a mile or more down the track. If, therefore, the appellant, even after he had so left his team, had used his senses, as the law required him to do, he could, in all probability, have averted the accident. Having left his team in such a reckless manner, and having failed, as indicated by the record, to look and listen, or use his senses, he is in no position to complain that the whistle was not sounded nor the bell struck, nor of any failure of the respondent to give notice of the arrival of trains, because his own carelessness contributed so far to the accident that he has no right to complain of others. Negligence of the respondent in these particulars, if there was any, was no excuse for negligence on his part. Where a person permits a team to stand upon a public [188]*188highway in close proximity to a railroad track, or is about to cross such track, he is bound to look and listen, in order to avoid an approaching train and the happening of an accident. Ordinary care, under such circumstances as are disclosed in this case, requires this.

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Bluebook (online)
61 P. 565, 22 Utah 179, 1900 Utah LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silcock-v-rio-grande-western-railway-co-utah-1900.