19 How. Pr. 199 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
The plaintiff recovered a verdict against the defendants for damages for negligently causing the death of Grustavus Bernhardt. At the trial of the cause the judge submitted to the jury the questions of negligence both in regard to the conduct of the deceased, and of the defendants’ agents, and the jury found, on both grounds, against the defendants. A case was afterwards made, and the defendants moved for, and obtained a new trial, at a special term. The grounds upon which the new trial was granted were, that the case showed the deceased to have been guilty of negligence, and that the defendants’ agents were not guilty of negligence, in causing the death, and therefore the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
It must be conceded that under the decisions of our courts, where it clearly appears that the death was caused by the negligent act of the deceased, or that his negligence contributed to it; and also unless it is shown that the defendants’ agents were guilty of negligence, the plaintiff cannot recover.
. It is not strictly necessary in this case to say whether any negligence, even of the slightest character, on the part of the deceased, could overbalance the grossest negligence on the part of the defendants.
Rail road companies, while in the use of machines eminently destructive of life and limb, should at all times be required to use the utmost care to avoid injuring human beings. The rule in admiralty, since the application of steam to navigation, has been so altered as to throw upon the steam vessel the burden of avoiding vessels using only their sails; and greater care and caution is required of steam vessels, as well because they are more easily controlled as because they are more dangerous and destructive if collisions with them take place; and yet the rule seems to be tending, in the case of human life, to require more care on the part of the man, and less care on the part of those managing steam engines. To the establishment of such a rule I do not yield my assent.
The question, however, in the present case, is whether there were any facts which justified the submission to the jury of the questions of negligence on the part of the deceased and of the defendants. As to the deceased, the evidence showed
The cases cited by the respondents, as authority for their view of the defendants’ liability do not warrant the application of a rule so comprehensive as is contended for by the counsel. In Harring v. The New York and Erie Rail Road Company, (13 Barb. 9,) it appears that the plaintiff drove at a fast rate over the rail road track, where he could not see the approach of the cars, and knew that hourly trains were passing that spot. In Brooks v. The Buffalo and Niagara Falls Rail Road Co., (25 Barb. 600,) the plaintiff was held guilty of negligence, because he drove his carriage upon the rail road track when the cars were in sight, coming towards him, and he stopped his horse upon the track and remained there till the engine struck his wagon. And the case of Dascomb v. The Buffalo and State Line Rail Road Co. (27 Barb. 221,) is one of a similar character, in which the plaintiff is shown to have driven negligently upon the track while the cars were in sight, coming towards him.
In all these cases, however, the question is stated to he
It will not be denied that negligence is, in all instances, a question of fact; and it is only where a question of fact is entirely free from doubt that the court has a right to apply the law without the action of the jury.
The remarks above made, as to the submission of the question of the deceased’s negligence, apply equally to the question of the defendants’ negligence. ,It is a question somewhat contradicted, in the testimony, whether the bell on the engine
Gould, Hogeboom and Ingraham, Justices.]
Upon most of these questions there was sufficient evidence to call for the finding of the jury. The evidence does not, in my judgment, present the case in such a manner as to warrant the court in taking it from them. There is no conceded state of facts to justify such a course; but on the contrary, I think it was the duty of the judge to submit these questions to the jury, for their decision.
I am of opinion that the order at special term should be reversed, and judgment should be ordered, upon the verdict, with costs.
Hogeboom, J. concurred.
Gould, J. dissented, for the reasons given by him in McGrath v. The Hudson River Rail Road Co., ante p. 156.
Judgment for the plaintiff.