114 Me. 92 | Me. | 1915
Action on the case to recover damages to a Ford automobile resulting from a collision between it and the defendant’s train, on September 27, 1912, at Hicks Crossing, so called, in the town of Norway. The case comes up on a report of the evidence, “the court to determine the question of liability of defendant,” the parties having agreed on the amount of damages to be assessed in case the defendant is found to be liable.
In considering and weighing the evidence, therefore, the court is acting with full jury powers.
We think the evidence clearly shows the following: The plaintiff, living in Hebron, directed his son, Forest B. Conant, sixteen years of age and who had been driving the automobile about three months, to take the car to Smith’s garage at South Paris in order
From the defendant’s depot at South Paris a short branch line track runs from the main line to Norway a distance of about a mile and a half. Pleasant street, leaving South Paris and going towards Norway, runs quite near and generally parallel with the Norway branch track. For the distance of about half a mile from the depot in South Paris the branch track is on the left-hand side of Pleasant street going towards Norway. It then crosses the street obliquely, and at grade, called Hicks Crossing, and continues to Norway on the right hand side of the street. The trains over the branch are light and few in number, being drawn by an engine equipped to run forward or backward, having a head-light, pilot and cow-catcher on the end of the tender the same as on the front of the engine. It is admitted that the situation at the crossing at the time of the accident was substantially as shown in two photographs introduced. They were taken from points in Pleasant street, one 91 feet, and the other 133.6 feet from the crossing towards South Paris. Those pictures disclose that from the points in the street where they were taken a train coming from Norway could be seen when it was some little distance back from the crossing. Pleasant street appears to be straight and to have little or no grade for some distance on either side of the crossing, and, generally speaking, the land through which the branch track is located towards Norway of the crossing seems to be comparatively level.
As the automobile came along Pleasant street from South Paris towards this crossing a train, consisting of the engine and tender drawing an empty coal car and a loaded box car, was approaching the
But it is the contention of the plaintiff, and he bases thereon his right to recover, that Smith, the driver of the car at the time of the accident, had so far taken the car into his possession to repair it that he had become the plaintiff’s bailee of it, and, therefore, that Smith’s negligence is not imputable to him, being a bailor, so as to debar him from recovering for any injury to the property bailed caused by the defendant’s negligence, although the negligence of Smith contributed thereto.
But we do not find it necessary to decide whether the car at the time of the accident was in the control of Smith as a bailee of the plaintiff, or still in the control of young Conant as the plaintiff’s agent, for we are of the opinion that the plaintiff’s case fails in limine, in that there is no sufficient evidence of any negligence of the defendant which is accountable for this collision.
The plaintiff alleges in his writ in substance and effect that the defe idant was negligent in the following particulars: that it did not jive the required warning signals of the approach of the train by wnistle and ringing of the bell; that it did not provide a flagman or ga Jes or some automatic signal to warn persons of the approaching train; and that it operated its train over this crossing, which is alleged to be near the compact part of a town, at a rate of speed
We cannot here take space to give an analysis of the evidence showing in extenso wherein it fails to sustain the plaintiff’s allegations and contentions that the defendant was negligent in the operation of its train and thereby caused the collision. It would be profitless to do so. We will therefore briefly state the conclusions we have reached after a study of the evidence in the light of the arguments urged on the one side and the other.
Whether this crossing is “near the compact part of a town” within the meaning of the statute may not be free from doubt. But if it be assumed that the statute applies to this crossing, and, therefore, that the speed of the train over it exceeded the rate specified by law, that fact does not conclusively show that the defendant was negligent in so running its train under the circumstances. In Moore v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 106 Maine, 297, 304, this court said: “The running of a train faster than the statute permits is not negligence per se.” It is competent evidence to be considered on the question whether in fact the defendant was negligent in running its train at a dangerous rate of speed at the time and place and under all the circumstances disclosed, but it is not conclusive.
We have already pointed out that the situation at the crossing was such that the traveler on the highway when at a safe distance from the crossing can see a train approaching from the direction of Norway. In further confirmation of that the conductor of this train testified that he was standing between the engine and tender looking ahead and that when the train was about 100 feet back from the crossing he saw the automobile “coming around the bend there” and that it “must have been two hundred fifty feet, and perhaps a little more” from the crossing. The engineer was in his seat looking towards the crossing and he first saw the automobile when it was “one hundred fifty feet to two hundred feet. I should judge” from the crossing. The brakeman stood on the pilot of the tender at the extreme head of the train, and he testified that the automobile was two hundred and fifty feet from the crossing when he first saw it. As showing that the rate of speed of the train was well within the estimate of the witnesses, and probably less than fifteen miles an hour, the brakeman, when he saw that the automobile did not stop
After a careful examination and painstaking consideration of all the evidence, the court is of the opinion that there is no sufficient proof that would warrant a finding of negligence on the part of the defendant in the management or speed of its train at the time of the accident. Accordingly the entry must be,
Judgment for defendant.