74 A. 897 | Conn. | 1909
The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to prove these facts: About nine o'clock in the forenoon of September 18th, 1908, a sand-car belonging to the defendant struck a dump-cart and a pair of horses in charge of one Riggs, a servant of the plaintiff. The place of the collision was on North Main Street, one of the principal thoroughfares in the city of Waterbury. The turnout or passing point for cars was about seven hundred feet north *514 of the place where the collision occurred. The plaintiff's team and the car were both going in a southerly direction. About two minutes before the collision, a regular passenger-car going south passed the plaintiff's servant and team. Shortly after the passage of this car the plaintiff's servant turned upon the trolley-track for the purpose of passing a team which was backed up to the curb unloading coal. The car which collided with the plaintiff was an extra car. The motorman in charge of the car had an unobstructed view of the plaintiff's team, and of the wagon backed up to the curb, for a distance of more than five hundred feet. No gong was sounded nor any other warning given of the approach of the car. The car was proceeding at a dangerous rate of speed, namely, from twenty to thirty miles an hour. A car under proper control at this point should not have been going more than four or five miles an hour. Both rails of the trolley-track had been sanded. The driver started to turn onto the track about seventy-five feet from the point where the accident occurred. He did not look before turning onto the trolley-track, because a car had just passed him and he did not expect another. The defendant operated its regular trolley-cars on North Main Street at regular intervals of fifteen minutes, and sometimes oftener.
After the plaintiff rested his case, the defendant moved for a direction to the jury to return a verdict in its favor. This motion having been argued by counsel for both parties, the jury were then instructed to return a verdict for the defendant because the injury was caused by the negligence of Riggs, the plaintiff's driver. This action of the court is assigned as error.
No claim is made that there was not sufficient evidence of the defendant's negligence to require the submission of this cause to the jury for its decision. The defendant's contention is that the plaintiff did not sustain the burden of proof upon the question of contributory negligence *515 that the accident was the result of the plaintiff's negligence in placing himself in a position of danger, when he knew that if a trolley-car passed it would be liable to strike him, and that he did not look or make any use of his senses to ascertain if a car were approaching.
Electric cars have their tracks in the highway where all vehicles have a right not merely to cross, but to travel. In view of the inability of the cars to leave their tracks, it is the duty of vehicles not to obstruct them unnecessarily, and to turn to one side when they meet them; but subject to that and to the respective rights of the two, a car and a wagon owe reciprocal duties to use reasonable care on each side to avoid collision. Galbraith v. West EndStreet Ry. Co.,
In the present case the passenger-car had passed; it became necessary for the plaintiff's servant to turn onto the track in order to pass the team backed up to the curb. The motorman had an unobstructed view of the plaintiff's team, and of the team backed up against the curb, for a distance of more than five hundred feet. He knew, or should have known, that the driver of the plaintiff's team might turn onto the track, and that if he did so a collision would necessarily follow. No effort was made to check the speed of the car, which was proceeding at a dangerous rate; no gong was sounded or warning given of the approaching car. The team was traveling at the rate of three or four miles an hour, and after starting to turn onto the track it proceeded from fifty to sixty feet. During this time the car must have gone three or four hundred feet.
If the jury believed that the motorman did see the plaintiff's cart, and that it was proceeding in the ordinary way around the coal team and clearing the tracks with reasonable speed, and that in so doing it was in, or coming into, a position of danger, they might have found that due care required the motorman to move slowly or stop until the plaintiff's team was out of the way.
Whether the motorman, in the exercise of due care, should have slowed up or stopped the car, was a question of fact which should have been submitted to the jury with the other issues in the case.
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.