179 A. 95 | Conn. | 1935
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages resulting from the death of her intestate, who was killed as he was driving his automobile over a railroad crossing after dark, when it was struck by a freight car being pushed along the track by an engine of the defendant. The jury rendered a general verdict for the plaintiff, but in connection with it returned an interrogatory submitted to them, with their answer, as follows: "Was Defendant's employee, Thomas Quinn, on the crossing swinging a white lantern while Plaintiff's intestate, Michael Belchak, was approaching said crossing? Ans. — Yes." The defendant made a motion in which, in the first paragraph, it asked the court to set the general verdict aside and, in the second paragraph, that, in view of the jury's answer to the interrogatory, the court enter judgment in its favor, on the ground that the answer established contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff's intestate. The trial court granted the second paragraph of the motion and entered judgment accordingly.
Since the decision in Freedman v. New York. N. H. H.R. Co.,
Such procedure has been quite generally adopted elsewhere. 64 C. J. 1177. In most states there are controlling statutes; Clementson, Special Verdicts, Appendix; but the practice has been recognized as existing at common law. Victor-American Fuel Co. v.Peccarich, 209 F. 568; Walker v. New Mexico Southern Pacific R. Co.,
Where an automobile is struck by a train while being driven over a railroad crossing at night, the fact that an employee of the railroad was "on the crossing swinging a white lantern" as the automobile approached does not in itself show that the operator was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. How wide was the street, how many tracks ran across it and how far was the distance over them? Where did the employee stand, in the center of the road or at one side, between the automobile and the tracks or beyond *635 them? Did he swing the lantern across the road or parallel with its direction? Were there obstructions to the view of the approaching driver? Indeed, one might ask, was the lantern lighted? These and other pertinent questions which might be suggested, indicate that an entirely reasonable hypothesis might be formulated within the scope of the pleadings and not inconsistent with the answer to the interrogatory, which would remove the question of negligent conduct on the part of the operator of the car from the field of law to that of fact and, despite that answer, justify the general verdict for the plaintiff. Even if we were to recognize as valid under our law the procedure adopted in this case, the record is not such that we could sustain the action of the trial court in entering judgment for the defendant.
The trial court in passing upon the motion took into consideration not merely the interrogatory, with the jury's answer to it, but also the facts in evidence as to which there was no dispute, and thus reached the conclusion that the plaintiff's decedent was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. In order fully to present to this court the issues of law raised by the record it was necessary to have all the evidence printed and it is before us. From this it appears that the facts necessary to determine the issues are established by the jury's answer to the interrogatory or by substantially undisputed evidence.
The answer to the interrogatory establishes the fact that as the plaintiff's decedent was approaching the crossing an employee of the defendant was upon it swinging a white lantern. In addition, undisputed evidence discloses the following situation: Wooster Street, upon which the plaintiff's decedent was proceeding in a northerly direction, begins at How Avenue about two hundred and fifty feet south *636
of the crossing. There are three tracks over the crossing; the two northerly ones are main line tracks and the southerly one is a track to a railroad yard and freight house; and the three cover a space of about thirty feet. The plaintiff's decedent turned from Howe Avenue into Wooster Street going at a rather slow speed. From a time soon after he had turned the corner until almost the moment of the collision, defendant's employee had been standing upon the crossing, between the two main line tracks, some twenty feet from the southerly rail of the track to the yard, and he was during this time swinging a white lantern, lighted, across the line of the street. There was nothing to prevent the plaintiff's decedent from seeing this light as he approached. He had lived and worked in the vicinity for some time and must have known of the railroad crossing. In statements made before his death, he said he saw no light and heard no signal of the approach of the train. He continued on toward the tracks. When he had almost reached them, defendant's employee, realizing that he was not going to stop, gave the engineer of the train a quick signal to stop, but it was too late to avoid the accident. From these facts, no other reasonable conclusion could be drawn than that plaintiff's decedent was negligent, either in failing to keep a proper outlook when he must have known that he was approaching a railroad crossing, or in failing to stop his automobile when he saw a lantern held by someone upon it and being swung across the highway. Borglum v. New York,N. H. H.R. Co.,
Upon the evidence the plaintiff as matter of law was not entitled to recover. To remand the case with direction to enter judgment upon the verdict would be obviously to work injustice. The trial court has inherent power to set aside the verdict, even though no motion has been made; Munson v. Atwood,
The only other assignment of error which it would serve any purpose to notice is that the interrogatory was not one which the trial court should have submitted to the jury. Whatever might be our conclusion as to that, we cannot shut our eyes to the fact disclosed in the evidence which the appellant has herself brought before us, that she withdrew her objection to the interrogatory and consented that it might be submitted.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause remanded to the Superior Court with direction to set the verdict aside.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.