82 F. 217 | 8th Cir. | 1897
This case comes on a writ of error from the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory. The suit was brought by C. S. Pounds, the defendant in error, against the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, the plaintiff in error, to recover damages which he had sustained by coming into collision with one of the defendant’s freight trains at a road crossing in the town of Marlow, in the Indian Territory. The plaintiff below recovered a judgment in the trial court against the railway company for the sum of $5,050. On an appeal taken by the defendant company to the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory, the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. 35 S. W. 249. The case was brought to this court by the defendant company, and the question for decision is whether the trial court should have given’ a peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. The judges of the United States court of appeals in the Indian Territory were divided in opinion on this question; one of them voting in the affirmative, and the others in the negative.
The material facts in the case, concerning which there was no controversy, are as follows: On the day of the accident the plaintiff drove into the town of Marlow, from the south, with a load of wood, over a road which ran parallel with the defendant’s railroad track, on the east side thereof, and in close proximity thereto, for a, considerable distance south of the station. As the plaintiff entered the
In view of these undisputed facts, we think that the trial court should have directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. The doctrine is too well settled to admit of controversy that a person is guilty of culpable negligence if he walks or drives upon a railroad' crossing in close proximity to an approaching train, which is in plain view, and might have been seen for a considerable distance before he reached the track. The precautions which a person traveling upon the highway must take when he approaches a railroad crossing are so well defined that it is no longer the province of a jury to decide whether such person was guilty of negligence, in those cases where I it is obvious that in approaching the crossing he failed to look up and down the track as he might have done, and thereby avoided all risk of injury. It is universally conceded that a person omits- not only a reasonable but a necessary precaution when he drives upon a railroad crossing, at a place where his view is unobstructed, without looking along the track with sufficient care to ascertain with certainty whether a train is coming from either direction. A railroad track is in itself a warning of danger, because trains may be' expected to pass at any moment. Therefore the courts have repeatedly declared that a person is, as a matter of law, guilty of contributory negligence if he drives upon a crossing without making a vigilant use of.