196 Mass. 355 | Mass. | 1907
The plaintiff was injured at a grade crossing of the defendant’s railroad in Worcester. The undisputed evidence tended to show that he was driving down Front Street, across the tracks of the defendant and of the Boston and Albany Railroad, directly in front of the union station; that the street crosses nine tracks at that point, the first five of which go under the arch of the station ; that the first three of these are used by the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company under a lease from the Boston and Albany Railroad Company, and the fourth and fifth for the passenger service of the defendant’s railroad; that the sixth, seventh and eighth are used for freight service, the sixth apd eighth principally by the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company and the seventh by the defendant, and that the ninth was a spur track to the Bradley Car Works. There was evidence that five lines of electric cars run through the street and over these railroad tracks at this crossing, and that many teams pass there. Two gates were maintained on each side of the tracks, which were raised and lowered by a gate tender, whose gate house was near the centre of the crossing at the east side of the street, between the fourth and fifth tracks. The plaintiff was driving southward, the gates were up on the north side of the crossing and he drove upon the tracks, but, before he got across them, the gates on the southerly side were seen to be down, and he stopped his horse. The evidence tended to show that, as he was driving upon the crossing, one of the defendant’s trains was about to pass over it on the fifth track, and the gate tender started to put down the gates to exclude persons from the crossing. The
In the argument before us both parties have assumed, and we think rightly, that there was evidence for the jury on the questions whether the.plaintiff was in the exercise of due care, and whether there was negligence on the part of the gateman. We must, therefore, consider the evidence bearing upon the relations of the gateman to the defendant.
We understand that the locations of the Boston and Albany Railroad and of the defendant’s railroad are adjacent to each other at the crossing. The jury hardly could fail to find that this was a dangerous crossing, calling for great precaution for the safety of travellers on the street. Gates were maintained, to be raised and lowered by a gateman, to exclude travellers from the defendant’s tracks while trains were passing. There was no evidence to show whether the defendant had been ordered to maintain gates and an agent to open and close them, under the R. L. c. 111, § 192. If it had, it would be bound to obey the order, and would be liable for the negligence of its agent in the management of the gates. If there had been no such order, the jury well might find that it was the duty of the defendant to maintain such gates and a gateman for the protection of travellers on the street, and that it would be liable for accidents caused by its failure to do this. Eaton v. Fitchburg Railroad, 129 Mass. 364. The evidence tends strongly to show that, with or without an order under the statute, there were compelling motives of duty and of pecuniary self-interest to induce the defendant to make provision for the operation of gates by the side of its tracks at this crossing. These gates were being operated at the time of the accident, and had been maintained and used for a long time. Without further evidence,
The testimony is entirely consistent with the existence of such
It was not necessary that the plaintiff should satisfy the jury under what arrangement the business of guarding the defendant’s crossing was being done. It was enough if evidence was introduced from which an inference could be drawn that the business was the defendant’s, and that the person doing it was its agent and representative.
The view most favorable to the defendant would be that, by the arrangement with the New York Central Company, that company became an independent contractor with the defendant, and undertook to do the business of protecting the defendant’s railroad with gates, in such a way as to leave it with no right to control, direct or manage it. If that were the arrangement, the gate tender would not be the defendant’s servant. But it does not follow that the defendant would not be liable for his failure to use due care for the protection of travellers at the crossing. If the gates were maintained in obedience to an order made under the R. L. c. 111, § 192,' we think it plain that the corporation could not relieve itself from liability for negligence in the maintenance and management of them by an arrangement with an independent contractor. By the terms of the statute they are to be maintained by the corporation’s agent, and the corporation is to be responsible for their proper maintenance. Even if there was no such order, and if the jury found that it was the defendant’s duty to maintain them for the protection of the public, we are of opinion that it was a duty that could not be delegated, either to a contractor or to a servant, in such a way as to relieve the corporation from the obligation to see that due care was exercised for the safety of travellers. It is a principle of law that, when one is conducting a business the necessary
Exceptions sustained.