Bistider v. Lehigh Valley Railroad

224 Pa. 615 | Pa. | 1909

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Fell,

The plaintiff’s husband was killed at a grade crossing of the defendant’s road with which he was familiar, where there were two main tracks and a siding. A train of some fifty empty coal cars stood on the siding, and the rear end of the train was within fifteen or twenty feet of the crossing. These cars cut off entirely from a driver seated in his wagon a view of the main tracks to the south, the direction from which the train came. When about ten feet from the siding the deceased *617stopped his horses and stood on the footboard at the front of his wagon and looked south. At this place he could by standing on the footboard see over the top of the last two cars of the standing train, which were, lower than the other coal cars, and thus have a view of the main tracks for a distance of from sixty to eighty-five feet. At a point ten feet nearer the track he could have had a clear view in either direction for more than a mile. His horses were struck by the engine of an express train as they were crossing the nearer main track. A nonsuit was entered on the ground that the deceased stopped where he could not see and failed to go forward to a point from which he could have had a clear view of the approaching train.

The facts proved by the plaintiff left no ground for the application of the rule that, when a traveler has stopped at the usual place for stopping, from which a view of the tracks could be had, it is not for the court to say as a matter of law that there was negligence in not stopping at another and better place. The case presented was that of a driver at a railroad crossing with which he was familiar, who stopped where, because of a temporary obstruction, he could not see and who drove on without having looked from a point where he could have seen. This was not a compliance with the rule which imposed on him the fixed duty to stop, look and listen. Stopping where he could not see was little better than not stopping at all, and it was not an observance of the duty the law imposes: Kintner v. Penna. R. R. Co., 204 Pa. 497; Mankewicz v. Lehigh Valley R. R. Co., 214 Pa. 386.

The judgment is affirmed.