77 Me. 62 | Me. | 1885
The intestate’s sleigh collided with a train at a railroad crossing. He thereby received an injury and very soon afterwards died. He never was conscious enough after the injury to tell how the accident happened. No one was with him at the time. No one saw him at the moment of the collision. As evidence that he could not have been guilty of any negligence which contributed to the accident, witnesses who had been his neighbors for some time were permitted to testify to their opinion of his general character for carefulness. We think this was overstepping the limit allowed to collateral evidence in this State.
It was said in Eaton v. Telegraph Co. 68 Maine, 63, 67, that " the best authorities clearly sustain the doctrine that the fact of a person having once or many times in his life done a particular act in a particular way, does not prove that he has done the same thing in the same way upon another and different occasion.” See cases there cited. If in civil cases a person’s character proves carefulness in one instance, why not in all instances? Where and how can a true line of distinction be drawn ? If by such proof a plaintiff can be shown to have been careful in one case, why not by the same mode of proof show that a person acted carefully or carelessly in any case — in all cases ? In many litigations, under such a test, there would arise a wager of character which would as unfairly settle the dispute as did formerly the wager of battle. If the intestate’s general character for care be in issue, why not that of the engineer and of every man concerned in the management of the train? If a man who is customarily careful were always so, there would be reason for admitting the evidence. But the issue is, whether the intestate was careful in this particular instance, — a fact to be, either directly or circumstantially, affirmatively proved. The objection to such a method of proof is augmented by the fact that the testimony consisted of merely the opinions of neighbors,— one generality proving another. But upon what tests or what definition of care are their opinions grounded ? The question was not whether the intestate managed his farm? or his shop, or his horses, carefully, but whether he used due care in attempting to cross a railroad track at the very moment when a regular train was due at the crossing. The law imperatively demands that a traveler look and listen before crossing if there is any opportunity to do so. What did these farmer witnesses know about the intestate’s habitual care in that respect. It is not a ground for the admission of this evidence that the plaintiff can produce no other. It is neither of primary nor secondary importance, — it is not evidence at all. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 84.
Exception is taken to the judge charging the jury to take into consideration, upon the question of the intestate’s care upon the occasion, of the injury, the knowledge of the jury " of the habits of thought and mind, and the natural instincts of men,” to preserve themselves from injury. Following, as no doubt it did, an impressive argument of counsel that a man would not be so unwise as to rush into danger when it was avoidable,— we are inclined to think the idea intended was presented to the jury too prominently. *
Such a consideration is by no means evidence, for if it were so a jury might accept it as conclusive evidence. It is no more than an accompaniment or an appurtenance of evidence. It may have some influence upon the interpretation of facts affirmatively presented. It pertains, as said by defendant’s counsel, to those natural laws in connection with which all evidence may be weighed. It belongs to the class of slight presumptions, described by Mr. Best, which, "taken singly, do not either constitute proof or shift the burden of proof.” 1 Best, Ev. § 319. It may give character or force to facts already proved. But it
But the weakness of the plaintiff’s position lies in the fact that this motive for personal safety does not operate upon the minds; of men until they can clearly see that they are endangered by their carelessness. It does not keep them from careless acts.. The danger is often not seen until too late to be extricated from it.. The careless act usually precedes the moment when the natural instincts for self-preservation are aroused. And a man is quite-prone to take risks. And a man is careless to take a risk in. crossing a railroad in advance of a coming train. We all know that he often does it. There is no doubt that the intestate was. impelled by all his instincts and love of life to save himself when he saw that the horrible danger was upon him. But how the-unfortunate man got into the awful situation no one seems to. know and no evidence explains to us. It seems to be an. unexplained catastrophe.
Other questions are discussed which may be properly passed.. A good deal of discussion is elicited by the ruling that the plaintiff’s intestate had a right of passage across the railroad. Perhaps, the point may be avoided upon the ground of a license or permission from the defendant company to the public, as was the-case in Barry v. Railroad, 92 N. Y. 289.
Exceptions sustained.