61 N.J.L. 682 | N.J. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff’s administrator obtained a verdict and judgment on the trial of this cause before the Supreme Court Circuit of Bergen County against the traction company for $1,000 damages, for causing the death of the plaintiff, a child of about two years and three months of
The court below left the question of the defendant’s responsibility for the accident to the jury, upon the controlling point of the case, under the following instruction, viz.: “If the evidence satisfies you that the motorman was running at an undue rate of speed or failing to keep such a lookout as reasonable care required, and that the accident was occasioned by that cause, why, then, you will find your verdict for the plaintiff. If the evidence does not satisfy you upon that point you will find your verdict for the defendant.”
Irrespective of the high rate of speed at which the plaintiff claimed that the circumstances showed the car was running at the time of the accident, there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury as to the motorman’s negligence in failing to observe the children in the immediate front of his car until after he was warned by the shouting of a passenger sitting behind him in the ear.
The defendant’s own witness, Henry Hodges, a car conductor in the employ of the company, but riding as a passenger that day, swears he saw, from his seat on the right side of the car, three children in front of the car, not two feet from the rail, and next to some bushes growing on that side of the car; that he, to use his words, “hallooed at the motorman and got off his seat, and he, the motorman, put the brake on
I quote more fully from his testimony, as follows:
“ When the' motorman got around the curve, and got towards where these bushes were, I saw three children; I got up and hallooed at the motorman; one of them came back like, as if something had made him scared at something; I could not tell what it was; he turned back and ran right into the car; the other two ran away—ran towards the house.”
The motorman who had charge of the car testified on the point relating to the stopping of the car, in these words:
“ When first I seen the children, I put on the brake and reversed the car.”
So that it follows that he, though standing, did not see the children until after the passenger sitting behind him had seen them, and had had time to halloo at the motorman and time to rise from his seat, into which he was afterwards knocked back by the reversal of the motion of the car when the electric current was reversed and the brake put on. Here was the lapse of precious moments of time before the motorman saw the children, on the. assumption, of course, that he tells the exact truth in stating that he reversed the' current when he first saw the children. If he had been properly vigilant, standing at the front of the car and looking in the direction of the track before him, he would have been able to have reversed the current at the very instant the children came in view around the curve, and before a passenger had aroused him by shouting from the car at him. There was some evidence also tending to show that the motorman should have expected to meet children at the place of the accident. Upon his cross-examination he admitted that he “did not know whether he did or not testify before the coroner’s jury that he was expecting to find children at that location,” opposite some dwelling-houses, and he admitted that he had seen children there on previous occasions. He also testified that he “had got the car under the full current when he reached these bushes.” This was just before the child was killed.
In the case of Woeckner v. Erie Electric Motor Co., 35 Atl. Rep. 182, where the child injured was three years and ten mouths old, the motorman was careful to bring his car almost to a stop, and, when he saw the child turn from the track, released his brake, “taking it for granted,” as he testified, that the child could safely get away from the track, but the court held that whether he took too much for granted or not was for the jury.
In the case of Schnur v. Citizens’ Traction Co., 25 Atl. Rep. 650, the material facts corresponded very closely to those of the case at bar. The child injured was less than six years of age, and there was evidence that other persons saw the child in front when the car was two lengths and one-half
The case of Pletcher v. Scranton Traction Co., 185 Pa. St. 147, brought for injury to a child under somewhat similar conditions, holding that where the negligence of the motorman is not the immediate or proximate cause of the injury, the question is for the court and not one for a jury, is readily distinguishable from the case in hand. There the child ran suddenly from the sidewalk to the track, and after halting on it an instant, was struck by the car. The appellate court, in sustaining the action of the court below ordering the plaintiff to be nonsuited, said “ that the car by which the plaintiff’s son was killed was running at a high and possibly negligent rate of speed, may for the present be conceded, but unless this was the proximate cause of the accident or was a material factor in it, the defendant is not liable. The boy darted in front of the car when it was so close upon him that, stopping as he did, it was inevitable that he should be struck. For all we can see it would have occurred had the car been running at an entirely safe and proper rate.” In the case at bar, whatever may have been the rate of speed of the car,
This view of the case renders it unnecessary to compare or reconcile it with the ruling in that of Moss v. Philadelphia Traction Co., 180 Pa. St. 389, cited in brief of plaintiff in error, and in which the evidence of the motorman’s alleged negligence, resulting in the death of a child (three years and eight months old), consisted only in the claimed undue rate of speed of the car, the court holding that “ indefinite statements” that the car was going “unusually fast” was insufficient to establish negligence in that regard.
I think the judgment below should be affirmed.
For affirmance—The Chancellor, Collins, Garrison, Gummere, Lippincott, Ludlow,'Yan Syckel, Adams, Bogert, Hendrickson, Krueger, Nixon, Yredenburgh. 13.
* For reversal—None.