Waniorek v. United Railroads

118 P. 947, 17 Cal. App. 121
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 21, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 836.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 118 P. 947 (Waniorek v. United Railroads) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waniorek v. United Railroads, 118 P. 947, 17 Cal. App. 121 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

*123 BURNETT, J.

The action was for damages for personal injuries and defendant had the verdict. Plaintiff appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial. • The facts deemed essential for a proper understanding of the case will appear as we proceed.

Among the instructions requested by plaintiff and refused by the court was the following: “If you believe from the evidence that on the twelfth day of February, 1903, and while plaintiff was being transported as a passenger on said car of said defendant, as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint, by reason of the negligence of the defendant, the controller on said car blew up or caught fire, and that the blowing up or catching on fire of said controller created in the mind of said plaintiff a reasonable apprehension of great peril or injury, and that by reason thereof, and in order to avoid such anticipated peril or injury, plaintiff jumped from said car, while said car was in motion, sustaining the injuries complained of, and that an ordinarily prudent and cautious person, under like conditions and circumstances, would- have jumped off and from said car, then I instruct you that under such circumstances plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence in jumping off and from said car, even though you also believe from the evidence that had- he remained upon said car, said plaintiff would not have been injured.” Whether prejudicial error was committed by the refusal to give said instruction depends upon the proper solution of the following questions: Does said proposed instruction embody an authenticated principle of law? Does the hypothesis contained therein find substantial support in the evidence ? If the foregoing be answered in the affirmative, then, could the court legally decline to give the instruction and was the refusal without prejudice by reason of other instructions which were given to the jury ? Of these, the last only can be the subject of serious controversy.

As a proposition of law, indeed, the instruction is hardly questioned by respondent. It presents a hypothetical situation of peril to a passenger produced by the negligence of the carrier and which creates in that passenger’s mind a reasonable apprehension of danger; and upon the basis of the passenger acting as a reasonably prudent man in his effort *124 to escape the danger is predicated the absence of contributory negligence. This is in harmony, we may say, with the test universally prescribed by the authorities. The only possible objection to it as a principle of law arises from the suggestion that the act of jumping from a moving car is irreconcilable with the theory of prudent and reasonable conduct. But the authorities are agreed that the circumstances may be such as to justify and even demand this perilous step, and they positively affirm the doctrine of the instruction, many of them stating the rule even more favorably for the injured person.

In Thompson on Negligence, section 2927, it is said: “It is a principle of obvious justice that one person cannot impute negligence to the act of another, which act has been induced by the negligence or wrongful act or omission of the former; and this rule applied as between carriers and passengers. It follows that where the passenger acts erroneously under a sudden impulse of fear produced by the negligence of the carrier or his servants, in consequence of which erroneous action the passenger is killed or injured, whereas he would have escaped unharmed but for the same, there may be a recovery of damages; for here, though the error of the passenger is nearer in time to the hurt which he receives than is the negligence of the carrier, yet in a juridical sense it is more remote. Perhaps it is a better statement of this doctrine to say that in theory of law the passenger is not guilty of contributory negligence at all, but that his error is the natural, and consequently the blameless, consequence of the fault of the carrier. The real rule proceeds upon the theory that the misconduct of the carrier has produced the erroneous action of the passenger, and that it does not therefore lie in the mouth of the carrier to defend an action for damages on the ground of such erroneous action, thereby taking advantage of his own wrong.”

Among the illustrations of the rule given in section 2978 by the learned author is one in the following language: “So, where a passenger upon a railway train is, in consequence of the negligent and unskillful' operation of its train by the company, placed in a situation so perilous as to render it seemingly prudent for him to leap from the train, as where he sees another train rapidly approaching from the rear on the same track, and he so leaps and is injured, he is entitled *125 to recover damages, although he would not have been hurt if he had remained on the train.” Many cases in support of the doctrine of said text are cited by appellant. Of these we refer to the following: Robinson v. Western Pac. R. R. Co., 48 Cal. 421; Lawrence v. Green, 70 Cal. 417, [59 Am. Rep. 428, 11 Pac. 750] ; Green v. Pacific Lumber Co., 130 Cal. 435, [62 Pac. 747] ; Schneider v. Market St. R. Co., 134 Cal. 482, [66 Pac. 734] ; Dinnigan v. Peterson, 3 Cal. App. 765, [87 Pac. 218]; St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. v. Murray, 55 Ark. 248, [29 Am. St. Rep. 32, 18 S. W. 50, 16 L. R. A. 787] ; Firebaugh v. Seattle etc. Co., 40 Wash. 658, [111 Am. St. Rep. 990, 82 Pac. 995, 2 L. R. A., N. S., 836] ; Baber v. Broadway & S. A. R. Co., 10 Misc. Rep. 109, [30 N. Y. Supp. 930] ; St. Louis etc. R. Co. v. Maddry, 57 Ark. 306, [21 S. W. 472] ; Budd v. United Carriage Co., 25 Or. 314, [35 Pac. 660, 27 L. R. A. 279] ; Buel v. New York Cent. R. R. Co., 31 N. Y. 314, [88 Am. Dec. 271], See, also, Braly v. Fresno City Ry. Co., 9 Cal. App. 417, [99 Pac. 400].

In the case of Green v. Pacific Lumber Co., 130 Cal. 435, [62 Pac. 747], a lady passenger had jumped with other passengers from a train going at the rate of from eight to ten miles an hour, under an apprehension of great danger from collision with a freight train, discovered to be rapidly approaching from around a curve. Recovery was opposed on the ground of contributory negligence. In discussing the question our supreme court said, through the late Mr. Justice Garoutte: “If the danger of collision is hanging right over a passenger’s head, the proprieties and niceties usually demanded of passengers in alighting from trains need not be observed to their full extent. Under these circumstances a person does not stand and ponder upon the order of his going, but goes at once. A safe or unsafe spot may be chosen upon which to alight from the car. If the spot be unsafe and dangerous, that fact, of itself, will not necessarily defeat a right of recovery even though a safe and secure spot was at hand and equally ready of access, ’ ’. and it was held to be “essentially a question of fact for the jury whether or not plaintiff was justified, in view of all the surrounding conditions, in jumping from the train.”

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Bluebook (online)
118 P. 947, 17 Cal. App. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waniorek-v-united-railroads-calctapp-1911.