Watts v. Hart

34 P. 423, 7 Wash. 178, 1893 Wash. LEXIS 109
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1893
DocketNo. 893
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 P. 423 (Watts v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watts v. Hart, 34 P. 423, 7 Wash. 178, 1893 Wash. LEXIS 109 (Wash. 1893).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Anders, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of non-suit rendered in an action brought by the appellant to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by appellant while engaged in “staking” cars at Hart’s mill, on the line of the Tacoma Eastern Railroad.

The facts, briefly stated, are as follows: The respondent George E. Hart was the owner and operator of a sawmill near the city of Tacoma on the line of a railroad belonging to the Tacoma Eastern Railroad Company, a corporation, and one of the respondents herein. The track of this railroad extended from a point in the city of Tacoma to certain timber just south of the city, and the business carried on over the track consisted exclusively in transporting timber to the mill of George E. Hart, and lumber from the mill to the city of Tacoma. On the 19th day of May, 1891, and subsequently, until after the injury complained of, the railroad seems to have been operated by George E. Hart as part of the business of the mill. The railroad, at the time of the accident, consisted of a track running by [180]*180the mill, designated by the witnesses as the main line, and spur track running from a switch in the main line, and in the same general direction, to the platform in front of the mill. This spur was about three hundred and seventy-five feet long, and was distant twelve feet from the main track at the point of greatest distance, and from that point gradually approached the main track until it reached the switch and connected with it. This spur track was completed about May 15, 1891. There was a grade of two per cent, in both the main and spur tracks. The grading of the spur track was done by the men employed about the mill, and the rails were laid by the railroad company. On May 19, 1891, the engine used on the tracks belonged to George E. Hart. On that day he hii’ed an engineer, Lawrence Plurlburt, a fireman, Tom Smith, and the appellant, as a common laborer, to do whatever he was called upon to do. From the 19th to the 22d of May, 1891, the appellant was employed by J. F. Smith, the foreman at the mill, in grading about the mill. This foreman, in the absence of George E. Hart, had entire, charge and control of the business carried on at the mill. Among the employes at the mill was one Kelley, tallyman, who, on May 22d, was engaged in loading cars with lumber and in piling lumber on the platform in front of the mill. On that day the foreman, Smith, sent the appellant to work with Kelley, piling lumber on the cars and platform. The cars upon which they were putting the lumber stood on the spur track in front of the said platform. At that time there were also upon the spur tracks, south of the cars being loaded, other cars, one or two of which were loaded. After the appellant had worked with Kelley for about three hours Kelley told him to go and help the engineer move out those cars. The appellant got down off the platform and walked over to the engine which was on the main track, and told the engineer that Kelley sent him to help get out the cai-s. The en[181]*181gineer said: “All right; you want to get a stick;" and, pointing to a piece of fir timber about sixteen feet long and four by six inches in thickness, lying on the ground near the engine, said: “There is one; take that.'' Tom Smith, the fireman, took hold of one end of this piece of lumber, and the appellant held the other. The fireman placed his end of the stick against the car to be moved, and the appellant held his end of it until the locomotive moved up against it. When the engine struck the end of the stick, the appellant let go, and it fell to the ground. Appellant and the fireman again placed the stick in position, and the fireman told Watts to hold on to the stick, which he did. The engine approached ‘ ‘ as fast as a man would walk,’’ and when it struck the stick it broke in Watts’ hands, threw him to the ground, and severely injured him. The appellant was a young man of about twenty-three years of age, and had been for four years a fireman in charge of a stationary engine in Boston, and claimed to be competent to be a locomotive fireman, but had no special knowledge of railroading, and had never seen cars moved by the process of staking, and was not informed by any one as to the danger incident to the operation.

The particular negligent acts and omissions on the part of the respondent alleged in the complaint as the cause of appellant’s injury were the construction and maintenance of the tracks as laid by the railroad company, failure to give appellant warning in regard to the dangers to which he was exposed, and to furnish reasonably safe and proper appliances with which to do the work required of him, and the employment of an incompetent and untrustworthy engineer, who carelessly and unskillfully brought the engine at a high and dangerous rate of speed in contact with the stick while held by appellant, thereby greatly increasing [182]*182the dangers of appellant’s position, and the liability of breaking said stick and injuring appellant.

No testimony whatever was given tending to show incorapetency on the part of the engineer, and the only evidence as to the rate of speed was that the locomotive approached the stick ‘ ‘ as fast as a man would walk, ’ ’ and no attempt is here made to support these allegations of incompetency or of negligence in employing the engineer.

It was shown by the testimony of several experts that the method of moving cars by ‘ ‘ staking ’ ’ is attended with danger, and is not usually resorted to except in cases of necessity, the danger consisting in the liability of the stick, or stake, to break and injure the person holding it. And it is claimed by appellant that the laying and maintaining of the tracks, where constructed and used, so as to make a resort to this method of moving cars necessary, was an act imminently dangerous to the lives of those who were compelled to use them, and amounted to the maintenance of a nuisance by the respondents, and especially by the railroad company, and that the company, therefore, negligently failed to furnish, in providing the tracks, reasonably safe and suitable appliances to conduct the business in which it was engaged, and that the injuries sustained by the appellant were the result of this alleged negligent construction. It is not claimed that either the main track or spur were not, as a matter of fact, well and properly constructed, but it is contended that the position and connection of the tracks compelled the appellant to engage in an unusually dangerous business, and that such construction of the tracks was not only negligent but was the direct and proximate cause of appellant’s injuries.

While we unhesitatingly agree with counsel for the appellant that the respondent railroad company was in duty bound to furnish reasonably safe tracks for the aecommo[183]*183dation of all persons who might have occasion to use its road, we are not prepared to affirm that the laying of the tracks at that particular place and in that particular manner was such a negligent act as to render it liable for injuries sustained by persons moving cars thereon, and over •whom it had no direct control.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 P. 423, 7 Wash. 178, 1893 Wash. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-v-hart-wash-1893.