Trotter v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

185 Iowa 1045
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 10, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 Iowa 1045 (Trotter v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trotter v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co., 185 Iowa 1045 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

Sauinger, J.

I. The petition alleges that the plaintiff’s decedent was walking along and upon defendant’s railroad track in the town of Ainsworth, in a westerly direction, and in walking, followed the main track; that, while so walking along and upon the track, he was approached from the rear by a passenger train of the defendant; that the engineer and other employees of defendant in charge of the train saw him on, along, and upon the track over which the train was about to pass, and in position of danger from the approaching train; that the employees had knowledge decedent did not hear or know of the approach of the train, knew that a strong wind was blowing from the place where the train was toward where decedent was walking, knew that this wind hindered decedent from hearing the noise of the approach of the train; that they saw decedent in a position of danger in plenty of time to have given warning, and to permit decedent to reach a place of safety; that the employees had the means, opportunity, •and ability to give warning and notice of the approach of the train after they saw decedent, and if they had used these means, it would have enabled decedent to reach a place of safety; that the employees, having seen decedent in a position of danger, and having full knowledge of his peril, negligently failed to give any warning of the approach of the train, negligently failed to slacken the speed of the train, or to make any attempt to protect decedent; that they willfully and wantonly and [1047]*1047with gross carelessness and negligence, as aforesaid, ran upon and against decedent, and so the train struck him from behind and caused his death; and that the failure to blow a whistle or give any alarm of the approach of the train, after seeing decedent in a position of danger, was grossly negligent, careless, willful, and wanton, and was the direct cause of the-killing of decedent.

1. Railroads : negligence: trespassers: only duty not to injure willfully or wantonly. The decedent of the plaintiff was confessedly a trespasser. There was no duty on the defendant to slacken the speed of its passenger train, or to give an alarm by bell, whistle, or otherwise to protect possible trespassers. In other words-, there was no duty to anticipate that there would be a trespasser on or near the track, and in that anticipation to slacken speed or give warning. There was no duty towards this tres-

passer until he was actually seen in a position of peril. When thus seen, there was a duty not to injure him wantonly or willfully, and a duty to do everything that could in reason be done, after his peril was perceived, to avoid injuring him. This is the extent of the duty, even where the trespasser is an infant, who cannot be charged with contributory negligence. Papich v. Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co., 183 Iowa 601, and cases therein cited. In that case, it is said:

“Since no duty to the trespasser arises until he is actually seen, it follows, of necessity, no care is due him before his peril is known. On that theory the general rule has been worked out that an owner of property trespassed upon is not liable for an injury resulting from the trespass, merely because care might have successfully guarded- against such injury;” that, until the trespasser is seen in a position of peril, there is no duty to give warning; that the railroad need not take into consideration that there may be trespassers on its line; that it “owes the trespasser no duty, and is not required to be on the lookout for him.”

[1048]*1048It becomes plain, then, that the essence of the petition is its charge that the defendant, after it knew the trespasser to be in a position of peril, wantonly refrained from all attempts to avoid injuring 'him, though successful attempts might have been made. Therefore, whether there was anything to go to the jury on depends wholly upon whether a jury would have been warranted in finding that this charge was true. It dpes not matter that no warning was given, nor that the speed of the train was not slackened. The right to go to a jury depends upon whether there is any substantial evidence that the engineer knew the trespasser was in a place of peril, and with that knowledge failed to use means at hand- which would have saved the trespasser from injury.

No one speaks from personal knowledge as to just what the situation was at the very instant when the train struck decedent. One Woodburn did not see decedent until just before the latter was struck. This witness is unable to say whether decedent was walking on the track, or at the side of the track in a path parallel with the track. If decedent was walking on this path, the oncoming train could not injure him, and seeing him there would not be seeing him in a place of peril. His position could become perilous only if he left the path, climbed a rise of some 18 inches, and then turned1 north and went upon the track. Wheeler was some 150 feet from the place where the accident occurred. He says he saw a hat that moved west as the train came on, and that “it did not look like it (the hat) moved very much toward the track. The hat looked to be four or five feet north of the north rail of the track, before it (the hat) moved south, as I have described.” Assuming for the plaintiff that Wheeler is describing the decedent, all that plaintiff may claim from this testimony is that decedent was walking on the path, when first seen by the witness, and that then he seemed to turn toward the track. All the remaining testimony consists of statements said to have been made by the [1049]*1049engineer. Woodburn testifies that, in talking to him about tiie accident, the engineer said, “It seemed just like, an instant before the engine got there, he stepped on a stone and tripped toward the engine, is the way it looked to me;” that the engineer had seen the man before, but “supposed he would get out of the way; he supposed he was far enough away so he would not hit him.” On cross-examination, Woodburn says that what the engineer told him was that the engineer saw the man, — thought he was far enough away that he would not hit him; that he was walking beside the track, and it seemed to the engineer that, just as he got up to him, he stumbled, or stepped toward the track.

According to the witness Smylie, the engineer said he saw “the man walking in the path along the right of way, and he was not in any danger until he came within an engine’s length of him. He seemed to stumble sidewise in front of the engine.” According to Woods, the engineer said he saw the man “walking along the side of the track, and that he stumbled toward the train; that be was walking in that path ahead of the train, and he stumbled toward the train and the timber, — the cross-timber on the engine; that he saw tiie man walking in this path. When it got close to him, he tripped or stumbled toward the engine.”

2. trial: aireetion of verdiet: review: favorable in-in»epartyt0 los"

[1050]*1050 3. railroads : negligence: trespassers: duty to warn fng peHi°0Yer’

[1049]*1049On determining whether a verdict was rightly directed against a party, it is our duty to give that party the most that can. reasonably be claimed for the effect of his testimony and inferences to be drawn therefrom. When we do so here, what have we? The ■ utmost of it is that a man was seen walking °

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Related

Mann v. Des Moines Railway Co.
7 N.W.2d 45 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)
Stanoshek v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad
198 Iowa 62 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
185 Iowa 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trotter-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-iowa-1919.