Williams v. Southern Pacific Co.

160 P. 660, 173 Cal. 525, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 441
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1916
DocketSac. No. 2240.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 160 P. 660 (Williams v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Southern Pacific Co., 160 P. 660, 173 Cal. 525, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 441 (Cal. 1916).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

This action was brought by Theodore Williams in his own behalf and that of his wife, seeking a recovery for the death of their son, charged to have been occasioned by the negligence of. the defendant. The complaint alleged that Glen L. Williams, the son, was on the eighth day of October in the employ of the defendant as a watchman on its railroad right of way near the station of Tormey, in Contra Costa County, California, and that he had been employed by the defendant for some time prior to the eighth day of October; that by the terms of his employment he was required “to work and be on duty as such watchman daily from 12 o’clock noon to and until 12 o’clock midnight,” and that he was ‘‘employed by the defendant to act as such watchman and to work and to be on duty from 12 o’clock noon of each day to and until 12 o’clock midnight of each day”; that on the eighth day of October Glen Williams was seventeen years, four months, and twenty days of age; that on the eighth day of October, “while said Glen L. Williams was employed by said defendant as a watchman, as aforesaid, and while the said Glen L. Williams was on duty as such watchman, and while said Glen L. Williams was regularly performing his duties as such watchman, he was struck by a train operated by the defendant,” and on the following day died of the injuries "thus sustained. Plaintiff alleged “the fact to be that the defendant was negligent in the operation of said train which struck said Glen L. Williams in that the said defendant did *528 not warn the said Glen L. Williams of the approach of said train and no warning hell or whistle was sounded, and by-reason of the failure of the defendant to so warn the said Glen L. Williams and to sound a whistle or to sound a bell the said Glen L. Williams was unable to and did not observe the approach of said train, and was run down and struck by said train, and died as a result of the injuries received thereby.” The answer admitted that Glen L. Williams was on the eighth day of October in the employ of the defendant as a watchman on the railroad right of way of defendant, and that he had been so employed for some time prior to the eighth day of October. It also admitted that “by the terms of said employment Glen L. Williams was required by said defendant to work and be on duty as such watchman daily from 12 o’clock noon to and until 12 o’clock midnight,” and that he was “employed by the defendant to act as such watchman and to work and to be on duty from 12 o’clock noon of each day to and until 12 o’clock midnight of each day.” The answer admitted that Glen L. Williams was struck by a train operated by defendant, but denied that at the time he was so struck he was acting in his employment as watchman, and denied that when he was so struck he was on duty as watchman, and denied that when, struck he was in any way acting in the service of or performing any service for the defendant. And in this connection the answer affirmatively alleged that at the time he was so struck and injured he had left his place of duty as such watchman, in violation of the duties of his employment, and was a mere trespasser upon the railroad track when struck by the train. The answer further denied the. allegations of negligence in the operation of the train, denied all negligence, and averred that the deceased “was struck by said train by reason of his own carelessness and negligence in failing to inform himself of the approach of defendant’s train in time to step from defendant’s railroad track and avoid being struck.” The evidence disclosed that the deceased was of the age pleaded; that, at the solicitation of his uncle, who was- the station agent at Tormey, he was employed as an extra watchman at tunnel No. 1, near the station of Tormey. His duties were to watch tunnel No. 1 and to keep all suspicious characters from loitering in or about the tunnel, so that no injury might be done to it. His hours of duty were from 12 o ’clock noon to 12 o ’clock midnight. He had been employed and had *529 worked for about a week. Over this division, in railroad parlance, the trains move east and west, over double through-line tracks, one being the track for the east-bound traffic, the other for the west-bound traffic. The station of Tormey by the railroad men is described as west of the station of Selby, and tunnel No. 1 is still farther west of Tormey station—west being toward the city of Oakland, east being toward the city of Sacramento. The deceased’s uncle, who had secured his employment, testified that he sent for the boy and when he came “looked him over and considered that he was a wide-awake lad, and so reported to the agent of the railroad company, who replied that it was all right and put him to work. ’ ’ Instructions touching his conduct and work were given to the deceased by his uncle. The uncle emphasized his instructions to the boy to keep off the “working tracks” and not to walk on a “live track.” He was further instructed that if he walked on a live track to walk “facing the traffic,” thus to walk to the west upon a track carrying east-bound traffic, and to the east upon a track carrying the west-bound traffic, so that any train would be visible because approaching him from the front. He was told of the imminent danger of walking on the live tracks, because trains were liable to pass at any time, “and I told him that if he walked on a dead track he would never get hit. ... If a man goes and kills himself by carelessness, that is up to him.”

The deceased was killed by an east-bound express train while walking with his back to the traffic, that is to say, while walking from the tunnel toward Selby upon the east-bound track. He was struck by a regular express train running at its schedule rate of speed and passing the place of the accident on schedule time, about 9:30 o’clock of the evening of October 8th. He was, of course, not at his post of duty—the tunnel —but had walked from the tunnel easterly past the Tormey station and well on to the Selby station when the train struck him. He had been furnished a night lantern and instructed to get oil for his lantern from a Greek known as Nick Paul, whose home was on the line of the railroad between Tormey station and Selby and near to Selby. It is in evidence that he had stopped at Nick Paul’s on his way to work to secure oil, but Paul was away, and he did not get it. It is fairly inferable from the evidence and from the condition of the oil cup of his lantern found after the injury that his lantern had *530 burned or was on the point of burning out, and that he had left the tunnel to go to Nick Paul’s to secure more oil. In addition to the physical conditions already pointed out, it should be added that there was a by-path leading from the tunnel to Selby along the line of the railway tracks, over which one could walk with perfect security, and that the deceased’s older brother had advised him to take this footpath or trail.

Touching the operation of the train, the uneontradieted testimony is that the engine was equipped' with a powerful electric headlight, which was operating perfectly. Also it was equipped with an automatic bell, which rang continuously. The engineer sounded his whistle after leaving the tunnel and taking the curve at Tormey. The train was moving at about thirty-three miles an hour. As near as the engineer could estimate, he was about fifty feet distant from the man when first he discovered him upon the track; his bell was ringing; he immediately sounded his whistle and applied the brakes, but not in time to prevent the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 P. 660, 173 Cal. 525, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-southern-pacific-co-cal-1916.