Wing v. Western Pacific R. R. Co.

182 P. 969, 41 Cal. App. 251, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 403
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2777.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 182 P. 969 (Wing v. Western Pacific R. R. Co.) 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
Wing v. Western Pacific R. R. Co., 182 P. 969, 41 Cal. App. 251, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 403 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HAVEN, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of non-suit rendered against him in an action to recover damages for personal injuries. In granting defendant’s motion :for a nonsuit, the learned judge of the trial court stated the reasons therefor in the following language: “The motion for a nonsuit has been made in this case on the ground of contributory negligence of the plaintiff, and this motion,' in the court’s judgment, must be granted. There is no question in my mind "that the plaintiff was grossly negligent in his actions that night. His testimony shows that he came *253 down from the synagogue, went straight down Harrison Street, leaving two streets in which he had a clear right of way; that he crossed these railroad tracks and went into a place of danger; that he saw, as he turned into Third Street, this car standing on the track in front of his house, nearly six hundred feet away; that he walked then seventy-five to one hundred feet, and then crossed the spur-track, and that he either did not look or he walked directly into the car that was coming, looking directly at it, and there can he no recovery in a case of that kind. The court finds, as a question of law, that there was contributory negligence, and the motion for nonsuit will be granted.”

Appellant contends that the question of his contributory negligence should have been left to the jury. Between 6 and 6:30 o’clock in the evening of October 7, 1917, plaintiff, who was then seventy-one years of age, was walking toward his home in the city of Oakland. He proceeded upon Harrison Street to its intersection with Third Street, where he crossed the two main tracks of the railroad owned and operated by the defendant, and, after turning easterly toward Alice Street, partially crossed a spur-track, then in course of construction, when he was struck by a car operated by the defendant and seriously injured. The spur-track left the main track at Alice Street, curved southwesterly toward the sidewalk on the south side of Third Street, and finally straightened out and ran upon the sidewalk in front of a building, the easterly end of which was seventy-five or one hundred feet east of Harrison Street. The ties and rails of the spur-track had been laid during the two or three weeks prior to the time of the accident, but the track was not ballasted, the gravel for that purpose lying in piles alongside of the track. The car which struck the plaintiff was loaded with ties and was being backed from the main track to the spur-track by an engine attached to the end of the car away from plaintiff. Plaintiff resided upon the south side of Third Street, between Alice and Jackson Streets. He testified that it had been his custom for many years, when going to and from his home to his place of business, to proceed along Harrison Street to the south side of Third Street and then turn down Third Street; that he had been crossing the two main-line tracks since they were laid, nine years previous to.the accident; that on the eve *254 ning of the accident, he turned east toward Alice • Street after crossing the main tracks and, because of the uncompleted condition of the spur-track, walked in the space between it and the main tracks until he reached the point where the spur-track left the sidewalk at the easterly end of the building above referred .to, at which point he attempted to cross the spur-track to the sidewalk; that, when crossing the main tracks at Third and Harrison Streets, he saw a train standing on one of them between Alice ¡and Jackson Streets, about opposite his home; that he did not see the engine; that although there was sufficient light to see the train, at a distance of less than two blocks, it was too dark to tell what kind of a train it was. Plaintiff was thoroughly familiar with the location. He knew that the spur-track was unfinished and that no cars had been running upon it when he crossed it two or three days prior to the accident. A photograph of the scene of the accident was introduced in evidence and is contained in the record. Prom an inspection of this exhibit it is apparent that it was necessary for plaintiff to walk over the gravel .which had been piled along the track for the purpose of ballasting before stepping upon the track, and that his attention would necessarily be centered upon his footsteps. Plaintiff had just reached the second rail of this unfinished track when a gondola-ear, loaded with ties, was backed upon the spur-track and struck him. He testified that his sight and hearing were very good, but that he neither heard any noise nor saw any lights or men with lighted lanterns. The evidence also showed that there were no lighted lanterns along the track where the gravel was piled; that there was a light on the front of the engine, which was pointed away from plaintiff, but that plaintiff saw no light on the car. Plaintiff was the only witness who testified to the facts of the accident. His description of the accident was as follows: “I was crossing one-half the new track, the other half I see nothing. I start in to cross. There was no light,, and afterwards come the ear, and the car gave me a push, and I fell down and broke my leg, and-after I take hold the leg with my left hand it cut my hand off, because I am left-handed. I don’t hear nothing, and I see nothing.. Q. Did you look to see anything ? A. Of course, I look around when I got to cross that track. I look around to see any *255 thing is in my way, and I don’t see nothing. Q. Did you see a train? A. I didn’t see no train. I see the train in the middle track, and I was over this track. Q. Where did you see the train? A. On the main track, in the middle of the street, and this I passed.” In reply to a question whether he saw a car on the main track between Alice and Harrison Streets, he said: “I tell you I didn’t take no notice to look back. I look only in front. I don’t see nothing because I don’t look around because I was to the track past.” Questioned as to which main track the train which he saw was on he said: “That I can’t tell you. I take care of myself, not for the track, because I see I pass through the two tracks. I didn’t take no more notice.” He testified in answer to a question regarding where he had crossed the tracks on an occasion two or three days previous to the accident: “I crossed anywheres. I always taken care by the main tracks; I crossed on the main tracks, and this track wasn’t working, no cars going there or nothing at all. It was laying nothing but the rails.”

If plaintiff had been injured by a train or car running on either of the main tracks of the defendant’s railroad, we should have no hesitancy in agreeing with the views of the learned judge of the trial court as expressed in his order granting the motion for a nonsuit. The condition of the spur-track, as disclosed by the evidence above referred to, presents a very different question. [1] A railroad track is in itself a sign of danger. Persons crossing it are charged with the duty to look and listen, because they are presumed to know that the track exists as a means for the passage of trains which may inflict injuries. The failure to take the required precautions before crossing a track which is being used for such purposes is “the omission to do something which a reasonable man guidéd upon those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs would do,” and is, therefore, negligence as a matter of law. [2]

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 969, 41 Cal. App. 251, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wing-v-western-pacific-r-r-co-calctapp-1919.