84 N.Y. 241 | NY | 1881
On the morning of April 10, 1868, the plaintiff’s intestate, a girl seventeen years of age, entered the cars of the defendant at Syracuse to go to East Syracuse, a station on the line of defendant’s road, where she had resided for seventeen months prior to that time. The train was not one of the regular passenger trains upon the defendant’s road. It ran in the morning from Syracuse to East Syracuse, primarily for the purpose of conveying employees of the road to the latter place, where a machine shop and freight-house of'the defendant were located, and returned in the evening to take the employees to their homes. But the defendant carried on this train other persons desiring to go thereon, as ordinary passengers, on the payment of fare and it was in charge of a uniformed conductor. There was a station-house at East Syracuse, located on the south side of the road, but this train did not stop at the' station, but at a point about 4,300 feet further east, opposite the freight-house and yard of the defendant located north of the tracks. There were at this point about twenty tracks. The special train ran on the third track from the south, and the two tracks between this track and the south line of the road were used for ordinary passenger trains. The road at the point where the special train stopped was not planked, and there was nothing in the arrangements of the roadway to indicate on which side passengers should leave the train. The house where the deceased was employed was about two hundred feet south of the defendant’s road in sight of the trains passing thereon. On the morning in question the “special” stopped at the usual stopping-place, and thirty or forty employees of the defendant left the cars on the north side to go to their work. The deceased was in.company with an old lady, and when the train stopped, she got off on the south side of the cars, and then turned around to assist the old lady in alighting. There was a path seventy or eighty feet west of the point where the deceased left the car, leading south across a field to or near to the house where she lived. The deceased and her companion, as
. The only question of doubt in the case arises upon the claim that the deceased, in not looking to the east before attempting to cross the second track, was guilty of contributory negligence. The court charged in substance that the plaintiff could not recover unless the deceased exercised ordinary care and prudence under the circumstances, or if her negligence contributed to the accident, but refused to charge that her omission to look to the east was per se negligence. But the court did charge that if the deceased knew or had reason to believe that the passenger train was behind time, or that it might come along at any moment, then she was bound to look, and an omission to do so was negligence. The refusal of the court to charge that the omission of the deceased to look to the east before going upon the track was in law negligence, is sustained by the case of Terry, Adm'r, v. Jewett (18 N. Y. 338). That case does not interfere with the rule established by many cases, that a traveler on a highway is bound, before attempting to cross a railroad track, to look for approaching trains, and that an omission to do so is negligence. In Terry, Adm'r, v. Jewett, it appeared that the plaintiff’s intestate had purchased at a station a ticket with the intention of taking passage on a train, and
We have examined the other points presented and they furnish no ground for the reversal of the judgment.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur, except Earl and Enron, JJ.. not voting, and Rapallo, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed.