This is а writ of error by the defendant railroad company to review a judgment of the United States District Court in Arizona in favor of plaintiff, who was seriously itíjurod in a collision at a grade crossing in New Mexico.
The complaint alleged that the crossing where the accident occurred was dangerous, because view of approaching trains was cut off and obstructed by cuts, curves, and configuration of the ground; that the highway was negligently constructed, in that the tracks were on a grade 8 or 9 feet above the level at the point of crossing the tracks; that the condition of the crossing was unsafe because of topographical features, and that defendant should have restored the highway to a. safe condition; that the defendant should have maintained automatic signals or warnings of approaching trains; that the train which collided with the truck in which plaintiff was riding was being run at an excessive rate of speed; and that there was no bell rung or whistle blown to warn plaintiff.
Defendant denied all allegations of negligence and that the approaching trains could not be discovered by persons who exercised reasonable care and prudence, and alleged that any damages suffered were caused solely by the negligent acts and omissions of plaintiff and his father. For convenience the parties will be designated as in the lower court.
On a clear afternoon in June, 1923, plaintiff, then a boy 17 years old, and his father were in the father’s Ford automobile truck, which was struck by the locomotive of defendant’s passenger train at a road crossing near Mountainair, N. M. The father was driving. The boy did not know how to drive the truck. At the crossing a single track ran approximately east and west. Plaintiff was familiar with the location of the track and the road. The truck approached from the south. .Several times during the last few miles of their travel, preceding the accident, the engine of the truck gave trouble. “The ear started missing.” The father had to drive in low speed most of ihe time, and on the hills it was necessary for plaintiff to push the truck from behind. The road ran parallel with the track for a distance of half a mile before reaching the crossing. About 100 feet on the south side of the track the road turned, rose gradually about 10 feet, and crossed the railroad track at. right angles. At the turn the truck stopped for about half a minute. The plaintiff got out, looked in both directions, and saw no train. The father then started the track, and plaintiff, going to the rear, pushed the vehicle continually until within 50 feet of the track, when, without releasing his hold, he stepped quickly to the right side of the track, placing his right hand on the back of the seat and his left hand on a brace on the body of the car. Keeping that position, he walked along with the truck, pushing it up the grade until it reached the top and the front wheels were moving over the first rail. He jumped upon the running board of the truck, which was moving to the down'grade, got into the seat, and then, for the first time, looked eastward and saw a train approaching about 50 yards away. Collision was unavoidable. The father was fatally, and the son seriously, injured.
Plaintiff testified that, if he had stopped *716 pushing, the truck would have backed to the bottom of the grade, and that from the position he was in when he was walking along the side of the ear hе could not turn his head and look behind him in the direction from which the train was coming, because to have done so he would have had to take his arm down and quit pushing; that his view of the train from the east would have been obstructed by' a right of way fence, which with poles and boards “set up a distance of 4 feet,” and a eurve in the track “throws your head right against this fence on down the track.” The fence referred to was a winged cattle guard extending out from the track about 6 feet. Plaintiff said further that, although at several times before starting up the grade he had seen his father stoop down and do something to the front of the car, he did not observe his father’s position while he himself was walking along, pushing the truck as it approached the crossing. A witness for plaintiff testified that he saw the .Spencers from the time they stopped at the corner of the right of way fence, when young Spencer began pushing the car up the grade; that the father then had hold of the steering wheel, and that when the truck was about half way between the comer and the railroad track he saw that “the old gentleman had this hand (indicating) on the wheel and was stooping down and fixing something on the ear,” and that he did not see the driver straighten up again..
Plaintiff also testified that, when they were about 500 yards from the crossing, he saw a freight train pass toward the east at a speed of about 20 miles an hour, and about 10 minutes thereaftеr the train that struck the truck came from the east. The distance between the crossing and the first station east, where a west-bound train could pass the freight train, was 1% miles. A passenger on the colliding train estimated the speed of the train at about 50 miles an hour; the engineer put the speed at'between 30 and 35 miles. Approximately 850 feet east of the point of collision the train came through a cut. There was a whistling post a quarter of a mile east of the crossing, but there wаs no automatic signal at the crossing. To the west of the crossing the railroad ran through a cut, and from the eomer'post at the foot of the grade a train coming from the west could not be seen “more than a telegraph pole” (about 150 feet) before it reached the crossing.
• Defendant company assigned as error the ruling of the court denying its motion, made at the close of the testimony,'for a directed verdict, upon the ground that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence which barred recovery.
As pertinent to the undisputed facts, the well-established rule is that one who is about to drive a motorcar or truck over a railroad track at an unguarded crossing always has the obligation upon him vigilantly to usé his faculties of sight and hearing. The driver must look to see whether a train is approaching. If, for any reason, his view of the track is obstructed, his duty is to listen. If, perchance, the engine of his automobile is making any noise, or if there is noise or confusion due to any cause which interferes with his hearing, it is his duty to take the precaution of stopping and listening. If the track is a single one, he should be vigilant to look in both directions before attempting, to cross.
Plaintiff argues that the ease is not wholly within those rules, and that the boy was in the relationship of a passenger or guest, as was Wright in Southern Pacific Co. v. Wright (C. C. A.)
Moreover, at times before going up the last grade he had seen his father stoop over in an attempt to repair the cause of the defective motor. Plaintiff therefore knew that his father was giving close attention to the faulty mechanism. This circumstance of itself should have made him vigilant with his own senses. So far as the рlaintiff was concerned, there was no sudden or unexpected loss of power or other circumstance to dis *717 tract his attention, which relieved him of the duty to exercise vigilance. Nevertheless, with the truck in a disabled condition, and with the control of its forward movement in his power, plaintiff pushed the car onto the track without looking eastward until after the front wheels were over the first rail and he had resumed his seat beside his father.
When we apply the fundamental test calling for the exercise of ordinary care and prudence in the situation plaintiff was in, we must reject his explanation, by way of excuse, that he was giving his whole attention to the car and to the possibility of a train coming from the west, and that the position of his body while pushing the ear made it difficult to keep the car moving and at the same time to look eastward. Morehead v. A., T. & S. F., 27 N. M. 349,
The ease was therefore one where the undisputed evidence was of such a conclusive character that defendant’s motion for a directed verdict should have been granted, unless, because the trial was in Arizona, the court was obliged to submit the question of contributory negligence as one of fact to the jury, under the Constitution of that state (article 18, § 5), which provides: “The defense of contributory negligence or of assumption of risk shall, in all eases whatsoever, be a question of fact and shall, at all times, be left to the jury.”
In Inspiration v. Conwell (1920)
Plaintiff contends that the constitutional provision as construed in the last referred to. case was correctly applied by the court below under our decision in Southern Pacific Co. v. Martinez,
What rule would have controlled the federal court within the jurisdiction of Arizona, if plaintiff’s own evidence had clearly disclosed сontributory negligence, was not passed upon; nor was there such a question before the Supreme Court of the United States in the Cole Case, supra, which arose on a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, presenting the question whether by a provision of the Oklahoma Constitution, similar to the provision above quoted from the Arizona Constitution, the defendant railroad company had been deprived of a constitutional right. The court decided that the state was not prohibited from leaving the defense of contributory negligence to the jury, whether a question of law or of fact.
Neither of those eases necessarily disturbs the doctrine quite recently reiterated in Barrett v. Virginian R. Co.,
But we pass that question as not calling for decision in this case, for here the plaintiff’s right of action arose, not in Arizona,
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where he brought, his action, but in New Mexico, where he resided, and where there is no constitutional or statutory provision similar to that in the Arizona. Constitution, and where the rule of decision is that in an action in negligence the trial court may direct a verdict, where the undisputed facts prove contributory negligence. Morehead v. A., T. & S. F., supra; Candelaria v. A., T. & S. F., 6 N. M. 266,
There is no controversy over the applicability of the principle that wherever, by either common law or statute law, a right of action has become fixed in one state, the right may, in comity, be enforced in another state,- where defendant may be found, if not against the public policy of the law of the state in which the right of action accrued, and that the law of the place where the right was acquired or the liability was incurred will govern as to the right of action, while all that pertains merely to the remedy will be controlled by the law of the state where the action is brought. Northern Pacific Ry. v. Babcock,
We applied the principle in Keane Wonder Mining Co. v. Cunningham,
It is our opinion that, the constitutional provision in Arizona lays down a rule of substantive law;, rather than .one pertaining to remedy or of procedure. Pritchard v. Norton,
It seems clear that such provision is essentially substantive, and that the federal conformity statutes do not require its application. Beutler v. Grand Trunk R. Co.,
In Northern Pacific Ry. v. Babcock,
The Babcock Case, supra, was also cited by the court in Slater v. Mexican N. R. Co., 194 17. S. 120,
In Morrisette v. C. P. R. Co. (1904)
In Caine v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. (1923)
In Hiatt v. St. Louis-S. F. R. Co. (1925)
We therefore must hold that the law of New Mexico, and not of Arizona, should have been applied in ruling upon the motion for a directed verdict.
Plaintiff has argued that the railroad company failed to comply with the statute of New Mexico (section 4697, subd. 5, Com. Laws N. M. 1915), which empowers a railroad corporation to construct its railroad across, along, or upon any highway which its railroad shall intersect, cross, or run along, but requires that such corporation shall restore such highways so intersected to their
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former state as near as may be, so as not to unnecessarily impair their use or injure their franchises. Plaintiff’s witnesses varied somewhat as to whether the highway crossing where plaintiff was injured was exactly where it had been before the railroad was built, but as their evidence clearly showed that the location of that part of the highway which was occupied by the rails of the-railroad had not been chаnged, that the crossing followed the natural surface and contour of the land, and that the grading was not more than sufficient to make the surface of the road smooth, the fact that the angle of approach to the crossing may have been slightly altered when the railroad was constructed did not materially affect the ease. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Pounds (C. C. A.)
Por error in overruling defendant’s motion for a directed verdict upon the ground that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
