Davis v. Saville
Davis v. Saville
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I think that the maps in evidence and the admissions, of the witness Robinson on cross-examination, showing the range of the cross vision which the engineman and also the fireman had ahead of them, make a stronger case for the plaintiff in the instant case than was made for the plaintiff in the Hubbard Case (referred to in the-majority opinion), with respect to the inferences prop-' erly to be drawn in favor of the plaintiff, in view of the fact that the case is before us upon the demurrer of the defendant to the evidence. I think, therefore, that, to say the least, the same inferences should be drawn in the instant case as are mentioned in the dissenting opinion, in the Hubbard Case, and that the testimony for the de
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the time of the accident the old Jerry’s Run station was occupied by a Mrs. Fridley as a dwelling. Just east of Mrs. Fridley’s house and old Jerry’s Run tower,
Saville and Hubbard were traveling west on the westbound track. Train No. 1, which struck them, had been diverted and was traveling west on the eastbound track. Before reaching Mrs. Fridley’s house, Saville and Hubbard had trouble with their motor and had gotten off their car and were pushing it along the westbound track when they passed Mrs. Fridley’s house. After they had passed her house something over two hundred feet, Mrs. Fridley heard the whistle of No. 1 somewhere east of her house. When she heard the whistle blow, she saw Saville and Hubbard set the motor
Leffel, who was examined as a witness for the plaintiff in the Hubbard Case, was not examined in this case, but, in lieu thereof the plaintiff introduced an engineer of five years experience and a map made by him of the scene of the accident, and a witness, A. G. Fauver. He proved by both of these witnesses various points along the approaching track from which a person, with an unobstructed view, could see a person standing on the track at the place of set-over. But this testimony was not deemed of sufficient importance to be even the subject of comment in the brief of the defendant in error. The map has not proved helpful to the court in ascertaining the facts of the case. It is on a different scale from other maps in the case, and every point of the compass has been reversed. The top of the map is south instead of north, and the right side is west instead of east. The Director General also introduced a cross-section map showing the slopes of the banks on each side of the track in the bluff just east of Mrs. Fridley’s house. This map is not made a part of the record, but its correctness is not disputed. It is not claimed that the maps introduced by the Director General are inaccurate in directions, curves or measurements, but only that the map introduced by the plaintiff shows more
The map filed by the Director General and made a part of the record, not only shows each of these points but many others besides. This latter map was not in the Hubbard Case, but was used as illustrative on the re-argument of that case. The new map introduced in this case by the defendant in error is only valuable as furnishing a basis for inference as to what the engineer or fireman might have seen from their positions on the engine, which inferences are contradicted by undisputed positive testimony.
The Hubbard Case had the most careful consideration of every member of the court. After full argument, both orally and on the briefs, differences of opinion developed among the judges, and reargument was had at the instance of the court on certain specified questions. The
The engineer’s seat overhangs the right rail of the track, and if a straight edge be placed along the base of the straight track, either between the tracks or on the right rail of the eastbound track and extended to the bluff beyond Mrs. Fridley’s house, it will be found that it strikes the bluff considerably to the right of the westbound track; but the defendant in error has insisted that the engineer had a cross vision which would extend to the point of set-over. This is mere theory. He relies in part upon the testimony of Robinson, fuel supervisor of the railroad, introduced by the plaintiff in error, to support his theory that the cross vision of the engineer would enable him to seethe point of set-over while he was traversing the straight track. He did testify to the fact, which is a matter of common knowledge, that looking ahead on a straight track there would be a cross-over vision. But notwithstanding this fact he testified that he had made a trial trip on an engine of exactly the same type as the engine in controversy but that at no point along the straight track could the point of set-over be seen by the engineer. His testimony on this subject is as follows:
“Q. Now whereabouts, before you reach that straight*568 line, if at all, from the engineer’s side looking through the window, can you see Old Jerry’s Run cabin?
“A. After you get up on the straight line you can see the cabin.
“Q. Can you see it before you get on the straight line?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Just as you turn into the straight line state in which direction the engine is pointing. Is it pointing towards Jerry’s Run cabin or towards the south wall of the cut?
“A. It was sorter in a position towards the cabin after you came around the curve.
“Q. Then it turns towards the cabin?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. From the engineer’s side can you see the south wall of that cut that is just east of Jerry’s Run cabin at the place where you turn into the straight line, or does the engine itself obstruct your view?
“A. You can see the point of the bluff.
“Q. The west point or the east point?
“A. The east point.
“Q. You are mistaken in the bluff. I don’t mean the bluff beyond the cabin, but I mean the bluff to the east of the cabin. Can you see the rock wall of that cut?
“A. You can see that when you first come on the straight line.
“Q. How far up the track, when you are on the eastbound track going west, on engine 160 or 166, beyond Old Jerry’s Run cabin, can you see from any point on that straight line?
“A. How far west?
“Q. Of Old Jerry’s Run cabin can you see from any point on that straight line? You said you can see the east point of the bluff. Can you see the track at all?
*569 “A. No, sir.
“Q. You cannot even see the westbound or north track from the engine on that side?
“A. Not beyond the bluff.
“Q. Now, as you came on down through that cut, into the cut rather, that is just east of Jerry’s Run cabin, state how far you can see beyond Old Jerry’s Run cabin, or can you see beyond it at all. Your engine being in the same position I have just spoken of?
“A. You mean how far on the eastbound track?
“Q. Yes, sir; can you see?
“A. You cannot see on the track at all. You.can see, I reckon, about half way between the point of the bluff, after you get up on the curve.
“Q. You can see half way, but on the westbound track?
“A. Yes, sir.
. “Q. And not on the eastbound track at all?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Mr. Robinson, did you make a very careful test of this?
“A. Yes, sir. You all told me what you were up there for, and I was looking carefully to see.”
This witness also testified as to what could be seen out of the side window. It is not said in so many words, but it is manifest from his testimony that he meant that a certain view could be had by leaning out of the side window, but it must be borne in mind that the side window was closed. It was “a cold morning, cloudy and blowing snow,” and very dark, and the engineer was under no obligation to have the side window open. It was an interstate railroad and the government regulation provided that there should be a front window ten by fourteen inches, and it was out of this window that the engineer was looking. As the train was going west,
We are unwilling to infer that the engineer could have seen the point of set-over from the straight track when the drawings do not demonstrate it, in the face of the positive testimony of the engineer who testifies that he could not see it, and of another observer from a similar engine on the same piece of track that it could not be seen.
As to negligence on the part of the fireman, the case is not as favorable to the defendant in error as the Hubbard Case. Mrs. Fridley’s house fronted about fourteen feet on the railroad, theeastbound track of which was distant about thirty-eight feet. There was a window on the south side, facing the railroad, about seven feet from the west corner of the house, and one on the west side about five feet from the corner. The gangway of the engine— the space between the cab and the tender—was twenty-four inches wide. The train was running from fifteen to eighteen miles an hour, and the sides of the tender were the same height as the roof of the cab. Mrs. Fridley was standing at the west window, “right flush up” with the window, and testifies that from that position she watched the train as it passed; that she could see
“Q. Now you don’t remember, as a matter of independent recollection, whether the fireman was firing or where the fireman first commenced firing as you went up the mountain, do you?
*574 “A. It must have been after we passed this mile post, when he was down there, because they usually get down in there somewhere.
“Q. I asked you if you remembered that of your own independent recollection or is that what you understand was the custom?
“A. I remember this man was down that particular morning firing.
“Q. Where else did he get down and fire going up that mountain except that place?
“A. You understand, it is like this, in firing an engine or a locomotive, you will fire it to the best advantage you can. Yon cannot shovel coal into that like you put in a stove or anything like that. A man when he puts-a shovel full' of coal into the fire-box, he has got to spread it and the best result we get is -when a man puts-the coal in and scatters it as he puts it in. He cannot go to work and put in twenty-five or thirty shovels full of coal, he has got to put in four or five or six or maybe ten and then he has got to stand there and wait a little bit until that fire brightens up and then he puts in others, and if he gets too much in then he has got to get a hook and break it up.
“Q. I want to ask you this question. You have stated that this fireman, Mr. Meadows, got down to the fire soon after he passed that mile post. Is that what you said?
“A. Yes, sir; that is what I say, and he must have-been firing along that straight line that you spoke of.
“Q. He must have been?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You don’t, remember that, do you?
“A. I remember that he was, and I remember that he was down in' the deck until after this accident occurred. * * *
*575 “Q. Firing all the time?
“A. Not incessantly.
“Q. Putting coal in the fire-box all the time?
“A. No man does that. They don’t fire that way; they can’t fire that way.
“Q. How long between times?
“A. Some of them will stand in the deck three or five, and some will stand two minutes and others might step up on his box every time he puts in the fire, they have different methods.
“Q. You don’t know how long he stood down there, do you?
“A. I couldn’t say positively how long he stood down “there.
“Q. You don’t know whether he stood down there five minutes or two or three minutes or whether he got ■on his seat-box, do you?
“A. That would be hard for me to remember, how he did that, after this length of time, I wouldn’t like to say.
“Q. And you wouldn’t like to say that he got down at “the mile post to fire?
“A. Not exactly at the mile post.
“Q. And you wouldn’t like to say that he fired all the way up that straight track, would you?
“A. No, sir; because I know he did not. He fired at intervals, of course.”
The fireman could not fix definitely where he began firing, but after testifying, as in the Hubbard Case, that while on the straight track his view of the point of set-over was obstructed by the bluff on the south side of the cut just east of Mrs. Fridley’s, he further testified: “I commenced putting in fire considerably east of Old Jerry’s Run.” It is unnecessary to repeat what was said in the Hubbard Case, to which we adhere, but if it were conceded that it was possible for the fireman, at
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court will be reversed and final judgment entered for the plaintiff in error.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Davis, Director General v. Saville
- Status
- Published