Wilson v. Southern Pacific Co.

44 P. 1040, 13 Utah 352, 44 P.R. 1040, 1896 Utah LEXIS 38
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1896
DocketNo. 652
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 44 P. 1040 (Wilson v. Southern Pacific 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
Wilson v. Southern Pacific Co., 44 P. 1040, 13 Utah 352, 44 P.R. 1040, 1896 Utah LEXIS 38 (Utah 1896).

Opinion

Zane, C. J.:

This action was instituted to recover damages in consequence of an injury caused, as alleged, by the negligence of the defendant in controlling a train upon its railway at t'he point where it crosses Twenty-Fourth street in Ogden City. The case was submitted to a jury, who returned a verdict of $2,065 for the plaintiff. The defendant excepted to the judgment of the court upon the verdict, and to the order refusing a new trial, and appealed to this court, and assigns the same as error. The plaintiff claims that the evidence shows that defendant’s negligence caused the injury. This claim the defendant denies, and it alleges that the injury was caused by plaintiff’s negligence. It appears that the defendant had a switch at the crossing, and three parallel tracks running east and west across the street at right angles; that plaintiff was riding east upon the street, with one Fielding, his neighbor, who- was driving; that Fielding stopped his team before reaching the west track, upon [357]*357seeing a train consisting of 14 or 15 cars with an engine attached to the south end standing on the east track across the street, and that the train then moved north; that Fielding then drove across the west track, when the train moved back across the street, and he stopped again; the train then moved north, and Fielding started his team again; that the train then moved south across the street again, the north car clearing the street about a rod and a half. At this point an important conflict in the evidence is found. The plaintiff and Fielding testified that Dalton, the switchman, signaled, looking in the direction of the engineer, and then turned, and said to Fielding, “Come on”; while Dalton testified that he said to plaintiff, who asked him if they could cross: “No; hold on. The slack of the cars will strike you.” It further appears that Fielding started his team across the track immediately after the switchman spoke, and the train came back north; that Fielding tried to rein his horses off the track, and his wagon locked, and the cars struck the wheel, and shoved it from 20 to 25 feet, and then suddenly pulled south again; that the car caught in the harness, and pulled the horses and wagon back 2 or 3 rods, when the harness broke; that when the wagon and team were being pushed, the plaintiff jumped out, and struck his shoulder against the wagon, and severely bruised it. It also appears that the plaintiff was well acquainted with the switchman, and after he got up he walked a few steps to where he was standing by his switch. The plaintiff testified that he then said, “Dal, who is to blame for this?” and that the switchman said: “It was the engineer. I told him to stop, and I told you to go on;” and that he then said: “Dal, did you tell us to go across?” and that he answered, “That is what I did.” The switchman testified that the plaintiff walked across to him, but denied the conversation. The plaintiff testi-[358]*358fled that this conversation occurred within three minutes after =the collision. When the above question had been asked and answered, the defendant entered a motion to exclude both from the jury, but the court denied the motion, and he excepted. This ruling of the court the defendant assigns as error.

Before determining the effect of the evidence upon the issues of fact involved on the trial, it is necessary to decide this error. Defendant’s counsel correctly urge that the switchman was not authorized, after the occurrence, to make any admission of negligence on the part of the defendant or of care by the plaintiff. Any narration by him, subsequent to the occurrence, of the facts not made upon the witness stand, was inadmissible. But the acts and declarations of the switchman constituting a part of the res gestae were admissible, though given to the jury by a third party. The res gestae included the fact that the train stood across the street, and the movement of the cars, and the different attempts of Fielding to cross, and what was said or done by him or the plaintiff, the switchman, or the engineer, during such movements, the jumping from the wagon when it was struck, the fact that the train then moved back; that Fielding drove on, and that plaintiff walked across the track to the switchman, and what they then said, were all so connected as to constitute a part of the transaction, and therefore a part of the res gestae. All of these acts and declarations were the immediate expressions of the fears the intentions, and the conflicting purpo>ses brought into play by the occurrences of the occasion, the situations of the respective paries, and their dangers and emergencies, real or apparent. People v. Daniel Kessler, 44 Pac. 97; Sullivan v. Salt Lake City, 13 Utah 122, 44 Pac. 1039.

We come now to the question of fact, was there any [359]*359proof of negligence on the part of the defendant? The evidence shows that the plaintiff was traveling on a street of Ogden City, a public road, and found defendant’s train standing across the street; that the train then moved north of the street; that the team moved across the first track; that the train then moved south across the street; that the team then stopped; that the driver of the wagon, seeing that the car had gone beyond the south line of the street, started again, when the train ran back again across the street, and struck the wagon, before it could get off the track. The engineer must have seen the men in the wagon attempting to cross, yet he continued to run his train backwards and forwards across the street without paying attention to them. The engineer should have given the wagon a reasonable time to cross over after he moved the train off of the street. But, conceding the defendant was guilty of negligence, the defendant insists that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence contributing to the injury. Whether the switchman said to the men in the wagon, “Come on,” or “Hold on,” presented a question of fact, under the evidence, for the jury to determine. The jurors probably found that he said, “Come on.” If they did so find, they certainly were justified that the plaintiff used due care in attempting to cross. But it is said that the plaintiff negligently jumped out of the wagon. The wagon and horses were being pushed by the train when he made the leap. As a prudent man, he may have thought he would be safer on the ground. It was proper for the jury to characterize this act from the evidence.

The defendant’s counsel insist that the court erred in stating the relative rights of the parties in the following paragraph of the charge: “Now the law is that upon crossing a highway and of a railroad track the railway [360]*360trains have the right of way; that is, they have the right to pass first. The wagon must stop for the railway train to pass, instead of the railway train waiting for the wagon to pass. But this right does not authorize a railway company to continue passing and repassing, and thus exclude wagons from the crossing. The wagon must stop, in the first instance, to permit the train to pass, if one is ready to pass; but the rule does not go so far as to require it to continue to wait for trains to pass and repass upon the same track, or for the same train to do so.” The court stated, in substance, that when a vehicle and train approach a crossing at the same time the vehicle should stop, and let the train pass; but the train should not continue to repass so as to prevent the vehicle from crossing afterwards. This was a correct statement of the law upon the point applicable to the facts before the jury. The paragraph embraces two propositions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 P. 1040, 13 Utah 352, 44 P.R. 1040, 1896 Utah LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-southern-pacific-co-utah-1896.