168 N.Y. 555 | NY | 1901
The action is brought to recover damages for the negligent killing of plaintiff's intestate, his wife. The defendant's road ran through the village of Gainesville east *557 and west, crossing substantially at right angles the main street of that village, which ran north and south. At this point the defendant had three tracks, the middle track being the main track, and the northerly and southerly tracks sidings. Just south of the defendant's road there was a creek, which the highway crossed on a bridge. The north end of this bridge was sixteen feet south of the southerly track. The accident occurred about half-past ten o'clock on the night of the 21st day of November, 1896. It had been raining shortly before the time of the accident and it was then still cloudy and very dark. The plaintiff and the deceased lived to the north of the railroad, and on the evening in question had been visiting neighbors residing some distance on the other side of the railroad. The husband and the wife started together to return home. The husband left her for a few moments to deliver a message and then went to overtake his wife who was proceeding on her course. The plaintiff reached the south end of the bridge just as the deceased was stepping off the north end. While on the bridge he discovered an engine approaching the crossing from the east. He called to the deceased that a train was coming. At this time she was at the south track. She stopped, held up a lantern which she was carrying, looked to the east and said: "It is so far down we have plenty of time to go over. If we don't it may switch here and keep us standing half an hour." She then continued on her way and as she stepped on the middle track was struck by a gondola car and killed. It appeared that the defendant's servants were engaged in switching some of the cars composing the train. The engine was backing towards the crossing with eight gondola cars before it, in the direction in which it was then moving. The length of one of these cars was thirty feet and the space between cars three feet. The deceased was struck by the car furthest from the engine. The evidence of the plaintiff located the engine when he first discovered it at a point 313 feet distant from the crossing. His attention was called to it by the noise of its "puffing" and all he could observe in addition to the noise were the lights on the engine and the *558 sparks flying out of its smokestack. The testimony of the plaintiff and his witnesses tended to establish that there were no lights on the cars nor any signal given of their approach, and that on account of the darkness of the night they could not be seen. Whatever noise they made seems to have been drowned in that occasioned by the working of the engine. The engine was moving at a speed variously stated from six to ten miles an hour. At the close of the plaintiff's case the learned trial court dismissed the complaint in obedience to the decision of the Appellate Division made on an appeal from a prior judgment rendered in the action in which decision it was held that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.
In disposing of this appeal it would not be profitable to refer to or cite from many of the decisions in negligence cases in which our reports abound. The difference of opinion to be found in those decisions usually relates, not to the general principles of the law of negligence, but to their application to the facts of the particular case in hand. The rule has been stated by this court: "When the inferences to be drawn from the proof are not certain and incontrovertible it cannot be decided as a question of law by directing a verdict or nonsuit, but must be submitted to the jury." (Thurber v. Harlem Bridge, M. F.R.R. Co.,
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, BARTLETT, MARTIN, VANN and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc. *560