Osterholm v. Butte Electric Ry. Co.

MR. CHIEF COMMISSIONER POORMAN

prepared the opinion for the court.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment entered on a verdict in his favor for the sum of $51 and costs, and from an order overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

The defendant corporation, on the fifteenth day of July, 1915, and for several years prior to that time, operated a street railway along and over Florence Avenue, in Butte, Montana; the track extending practically north and south. At 11:30 o’clock P. M. on the fifteenth day of July, 1915, and at a point on said Florence Avenue at or near its intersection with B Street, the plaintiff’s intestate, Edus B. Lund, was struck by an electric car operated by employees of the defendant company, and was so badly injured that he died on the following day. Plaintiff alleges that the deceased came to his death by reason of the negligence of defendant’s employees in the operation of said car, and for defects in the car. The grounds of negligence charged in the complaint are (a) danger*198ous rate of speed; (b) car not under control; (c) insufficient headlight; (d) failure to keep proper lookout; (e) failure to ring bell or give warning of the approach of the car. The plaintiff further alleges that the deceased, at the time of his death, was strong, able-bodied, a miner by occupation, twenty-one years of age, life expectancy forty-two years, earning and capable of earning $4 per day. Damages were asked in the sum of $60,000.

The answer of the defendants contains admissions and denials, but it is sufficient here to say that the negligence charged against the defendants is denied, and that defendants charge the deceased with contributory negligence in the following particulars: That he left the open and used portion of Florence Avenue, and attempted to cross the car-track at a place where Florence Avenue was unopen, uneven, rough and unguarded, and where there was no crossing, and at a place other than a regular crossing, and at a time when a ear was approaching; and that whatever injuries were suffered by the deceased were caused as a result of his own contributory negligence.

Leonard Gustafson, a witness called by the plaintiff, testified that on the day of the accident the deceased hired a horse and buggy, and that the witness and deceased went to a funeral. In detailing the travel and course during the day he states: That they first went to the undertaker’s place, then to the cemetery, then to the Five Mile House, then to the Nine Mile House, then to the Ten Mile House, then to the) Mountain View Hotel, and that they left the latter place a few minutes before 11 o’clock at night; that at that time the witness was driving. It was pretty dark, and he could not see the road very well. “When we came to Florence Avenue, we came into a little ditch with the front wheel. We had to step out of the buggy, both of us. I got out of the buggy first. * * * When I got out of the buggy, I was looking around, and I seen the street-ear track right there, so I tried to get the horse and buggy over. When I looked around, I was right on the side of the buggy. Lund, he was right close to me. I *199looked north, and south, both directions. I looked around. I didn’t see any street-car. Then I tried to drive the horse over. I drove it over. When I got across with the horse, I was looking after my partner, and at the same time I seen the street-car coming. It was about ten feet or fifteen off from Ed [deceased]. He was following me and in a northwest direction. He was in the middle of the car-track. The streetcar knocked him down and * * # dragged him about thirty feet.” Witness further stated: That he drove about ten, fifteen, or twenty feet across the track and stopped; that he neither saw nor heard the car until just before it struck Lund; that he did not hear a bell; that he crossed the tracks at an angle in a northwest direction: that the street-ear track at that place was straight for at least two blocks, then there was a curve; that he and Lund had been drinking some during . the day, but that neither of them was drunk at the time of the accident; that he walked and drove the horse across the track; that at the time he saw Lund on the track there was a little light on the car, “so I could see Ed was following me, and at the same time the street-car knocked him down * * * he was standing and following me; * * * it was a little light on the car. I could see a little ahead at the time. It was an. open car.”

Angus McLeod, called as a witness by plaintiff, testified that he was riding on the car at the time Lund was struck; that the car was traveling at a moderate rate of speed, from twelve to fifteen miles per hour; the motorman was at his proper station; the lights were burning brightly in the car at all times; that it was an open car, nothing unusual about the machinery; that it was a straight track; that he noticed the headlight “burning bright” at the last curve; and that he did not notice the headlight after that time, but all other lights were burning brightly when the ear stopped. The stop was made from fifteen to twenty-five feet after the brakes were applied; that it was a “sudden stop — a very quick stop.”

*200Victor Osterholm, the plaintiff, was called, and testified that he was on the ground the following day; that the buggy crossed the car-tracks “kind of south side of B Street, going northwest”; that both B Street and Florence Avenue were open and traveled streets; that “the street-ear track is straight for about eighteen rails, track rails. A rail is about thirty feet long.” Witness further testified to finding a little spot of blood about thirty feet north of where the buggy crossed the track, but he saw no sign of the body having been dragged.

Joseph Armstrong, called by plaintiff, testified that both Florence Avenue and B Street were open streets at the time of the accident and that grading was going on there. Plaintiff’s witnesses also testified that at the place where the buggy crossed the street-car track there were no planks between the rails; that the dirt was filled up to the top of the ties.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, defendants moved for nonsuit, which was sustained as to defendant Wharton, and overruled as to the other defendants.

Witnesses for the defendants testified that they followed the tracks of the buggy, which was driven by Gustafson and deceased; that they crossed the street-ear track in the vicinity of C Street, extending then in an easterly direction; that they turned in a northerly direction, parallel to the street-car track, which they followed for some little distance, between Florence Avenue and Massachusetts Street, where there was no road at all, and extending to a point about fifty or sixty feet from what is known as B Street. There the tracks turned abruptly toward the west and went down a bank, due to an excavation on Florence Avenue, in an angling direction toward the northwest, across the street-car tracks; that the streets at that point were plowed, and they were doing grading there; that there was an embankment of a foot or eighteen inches where the buggy went across; that the country there “looked like No Man’s Land. It was kind of a lot of holes, like a plowed field, you know; very rough.”

*201The motorman testified that he saw something on the track about seventy feet distant, which he thought was loose dirt; that he did not detect that it was a human body until he got close to it, within twenty or thirty feet; he then found it was a man lying down between the rails, with his head on a little bank of dirt. The motorman further testified that the headlight was burning at all times and that he could distinguish an object at a distance of 200 feet.

Defendants’ Exhibits 1 and 2, being photographs of the place of the accident, clearly support the statements made by defendants’ witnesses as to the character of the ground and of the crossing where the accident occurred.

The evidence of the defendants is further to the effect that there was not any defect in the headlight; that all the lights on the car, including the headlight, burn in series with four lamps in the car and one in the headlight; that, whenever the four lamps in the car are lit, the headlight is burning; that the street-car, at the time of the accident, stopped about opposite the buggy; and that Lund’s body had been dragged about five feet. Witnesses for the defendants also testified that the deceased was drunk at 8 o’clock that night, and that both Lund and Gustafson, the driver, were drunk at the time of the accident. This fact was controverted by the plaintiff’s witnesses. At the close of the testimony, the defendants asked for a directed verdict in their favor, which was overruled.

[1] The specification of errors of plaintiff contains eight assignments; the first one being general, and the second and third to the effect that the court refused to admit evidence as to miners’ wages at the time of the trial. This, we take it, was immaterial, as the plaintiff by his pleadings, had limited himself in this regard.

[2] Assignments 4, 5, 6 and 7 take issue with the court in admitting evidence upon the question as to whether the deceased was drunk at the time of the accident. These questions have been decided adversely to the contention of the appellant by this court in Herzig v. Sandberg, 54 Mont. 538, *202172 Pac. 132, and in addition to that ease we may cite here the following: Buddenberg v. Charles P. Chouteau Trans. Co., 108 Mo. 394, 18 S. W. 970; Rhyner v. City of Menasha, 107 Wis. 201, 83 N. W. 303; Ford v. Umatilla Co., 15 Or. 313, 16 Pac. 33; McIntosh v. Standard Oil Co., 89 Kan. 289, Ann. Cas. 1914D, 112, 47 L. R. A. (n. s.) 730, 131 Pac. 151.

[3] By assignment 8 the appellant takes issue with the court in refusing to give its proposed instruction No. 11, which is: “You are instructed that the law presumes that the plaintiff’s decedent, Edus B. Lund, was at the time of the injury to him, exercising ordinary care for his safety.” Appellant contends that subdivision 4 of section 7962, Bevised Codes, is authority for such an instruction. This statute is as follows: “That a person takes ordinary care of his own concerns.” This statute, however, applies to a defendant as well as to a plaintiff, and one of the questions at issue here is whether the proper kind of care was used. The plaintiff charges negligence on the part of the defendants; the defendants charge negligence on the part of the plaintiff. The court has no more fight to presume that the deceased used ordinary care than it has to presume that the defendants used ordinary care. This is one of the questions of fact at issue.

[4] At the trial the plaintiff seemed to proceed upon the theory that, having shown that the deceased met his death by being struck with the car, the burden was then upon the defendants to show that they were not guilty of negligence. However, this court has decided: “Every person is bound to an absolute duty to exercise his intelligence to discover and avoid dangers that may threaten him. When, therefore, a plaintiff asserts the right of recovery on the ground of culpable negligence of the defendant, he is bound to show that he exercised his intelligence to discover and avoid the danger, which he alleges was brought about by the negligence of the defendant.” (Sherris v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co. et al., 55 Mont. 195, 175 Pac. 271.)

*203[5] Appellant contends that the damages awarded are inadequate, and for that reason the judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, or that this court should of its own motion award adequate damages, which the appellant fixes at $23,904, which he claims is the cost of an annuity yielding $100 per month. That a judgment may be reversed and a new trial ordered, where the damages awarded are clearly inadequate under the evidence, has been many times affirmed by this and other courts; but this court never has assumed to exercise the authority or power of “scaling a verdict upward.” Appellant cites the following eases in this part of his brief: Flaherty v. Butte Elec. Ry. Co., 42 Mont. 89, 111 Pac. 348; Phillips v. London, S. W. Ry., 2 Q. B. Div. 78; Rawitzer v. St. Paul City Ry. Co., 94 Minn. 494, 103 N. W. 499; Meyer v. Hart, 23 App. Div. 131, 48 N. Y. Supp. 904; Marinai v. Dougherty, 46 Cal. 26; McCarthy v. St. Louis Transit Co., 192 Mo. 396, 91 S. W. 132; Burns v. Merchants’ etc., 26 Tex. Civ. App. 223, 63 S. W. 1061; Usher v. Scranton Ry. Co. (C. C.), 132 Fed. 405; Thompson v. Burtis, 65 Kan. 674, 70 Pac. 603; Loevenhart v. Lindell Ry. Co., 190 Mo. 342, 88 S. W. 757; Lane v. United Electric L. & W. Co., 90 Conn. 35, L. R. A. 1916C, 808, 96 Atl. 155; Gans v. Woolfolk, 2 Mont. 458; Bielenberg v. Eyre, 44 Mont. 397, 120 Pac. 243; Atherton v. Fowler, 46 Cal. 320; Spence v. Damrow, 32 Neb. 112, 48 N. W. 880; Tolchinsky v. Schiff, 47 Misc. Rep. 371, 93 N. Y. Supp. 1073; Warner v. Talbot, 112 La. 817, 104 Am. St. Rep. 460, 66 L. R. A. 336, 36 South. 743.

The respondents take issue with this contention of appellant and cite the following .authorities: Haley v. Mobile & O. R. Co., 7 Baxt. 239; Such v. Cleveland etc. R. Co., 2 Ohio Dec. (Reprint) 352; Smith v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 6 S. D. 583, 28 L. R. A. 573, 62 N. W. 967; Jenkins v. Hankins, 98 Term. 545, 41 S. W. 1028; De Luna v. Union Ry. Co., 130 App. Div. 386, 114 N. Y. Supp. 893; Leahy v. Davis, 121 Mo *204227, 25 S. W. 941; Silberstein v. Wm. Wicke Co. (Super. Ct.), 22 N. Y. Supp. 170.

[6] Prom our view of this case, these questions are not involved, for here every act of negligence charged in the complaint is directly negatived by plaintiff’s witnesses, except the lookout kept by the motorman, and that, to say the least, is thrown in doubt by the circumstances attending the injury. Just why deceased was on the track at that particular time, or how long he had been there, is not explained; whether he had just stepped on the track, or whether he had been there long enough for the motorman to see him in time to stop the car, or why he did not see that lighted, open car approaching him on a straight track of 540 feet, or what he was doing while Gustafson was walking and driving the horse across the track and ten or twenty feet beyond, and then stopping and looking to see what had become of Lund, are .all matters unexplained. Had this cause been submitted to the jury on the evidence of plaintiff alone, and verdict returned for the defendants, it would have been amply sustained by the evidence, and then, when we add to this testimony that of the defendants as to the sufficiency of the lights, speed, control and condition of the car, the lookout kept by the motorman, the course followed by deceased in getting to and across the track, and the character of the ground which he passed over and the photographic evidence of the ground, we reach the conclusion that the defendants’ motion for directed verdict should have been sustained on the general ground that the evidence of the plaintiff was insufficient to sustain a verdict and judgment in his favor.

If this were an appeal by the defendants, asking to have the verdict and order reversed, this court would be compelled to grant the reversal; but this is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment in his favor. The defendants (the respondents here) are not taking issue with the judgment, but, on the contrary, ask that both the judgment and the order appealed from be affirmed. To grant a reversal in “this cause would be reversing a judgment and order at the instigation of the party — • *205in this ease the plaintiff — on the sole ground that he failed in producing sufficient evidence to prove his cause.

We recommend that the judgment and order appealed from be affirmed.

Per Curiam:

For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.

Affirmed,

Rehearing denied July 2, 1921.