164 Iowa 216 | Iowa | 1914
I. Action by Mary Davitt, as guardian of Phillip Davitt, for damages resulting from the striking of a team of horses and buggy by a train of the defendant. There was a trial to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appeals. Appellant presents no error as against the finding of negligence on its part, but insists that the record affirmatively shows contributory negligence on the part of the driver of the team; and this is the only question presented by the appeal. The evidence material to that inquiry is in substance as follows: The crossing where the accident occurred was where the right of way intersects a lane leading to plaintiff’s house, which is about thirty rods from the line of railway; this private lane, however, being by the appellant company treated as a highway crossing. The lane runs east and west and crosses the railroad at an angle; the crossing being known as “Davitt’s crossing.” From Davitt’s house toward the crossing, for about half the distance the ground slopes away from the house; it is then level for some distance; and, as the crossing is approached, it rises gradually. On the north side of the lane is a row of willow trees that extends to within about fifty-three feet of the right of way fence. Between this point and the railway track there are no trees. From a point just outside the last trees at the north of the lane to the west rail of the track is one hundred and fourteen feet by actual measurement. This point is four feet eight inches below the rail,
Neis Sandegard, the driver of the team when the accident occurred, '■ testified:
I worked for Davitt during October, November, and December before the accident. I was shucking corn across the railroad from the house; corn was hauled from the field to the crib, and I crossed the track at this crossing a great many times hauling corn. I had driven the.plaintiff’s little boy to school for about a month before the accident, and left the house about the same time every morning. The accident occurred about 8:30, and I left the house at about the time every day that this train passed over this crossing. On the morning of the accident, I knew the train had not gone by and that it would come along very shortly if it was on time. As I left the yard, I said to myself I didn’t think the train had gone down yet; it must be late. I didn’t know exactly when it was coming, but I was expecting it. Leaving the house and driving down the lane to the crossing, you go down a little hill, then there is a little level place, and as you approach the crossing the ground gradually rises. After you pass the willow trees there is nothing to obstruct the view looking to the north except a pile of ties and the hill through which the right of way was cut. The pile of ties was inside the right of way fence and between the fence and track, something like forty or fifty feet north of the crossing, about halfway between the track and the right of way fence, and,
A witness, Gilliland, called by plaintiff, testified that, on approaching the track from the one hundred and fourteen-foot point, the view to the north became wider, and when thirty-five to forty feet from the track one could see one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet into the cut. At a point fifty feet from the crossing the only obstruction is the hill, four feet two inches high, and the depression in the lane below the track. Other witnesses testified in substance to the same facts. This sufficiently presents the record for a consideration of the question raised by this appeal.
II. The particular negligence charged was that in approaching the crossing where the accident happened the engineer in charge of the train failed to blow the whistle or ring the bell. While this crossing was a private lane, in appellant’s brief it is stated that the defendant company treated it as though it were a private crossing, and the evidence is without dispute that it was the practice of those in charge of the trains passing over it to give the customary crossing signals.
It is the claim of the appellant that from the undisputed testimony it appears that, had the driver in approaching the crossing exercised ordinary care in looking and listening, he must have seen and heard the approach of the train in time to have avoided injury. While the rule as to looking and listening upon approaching a railroad track has been often stated and recognized as summing up the degree of care which should control and guide one, in the absence of other conditions excusing from such as a continuous duty, such is not without its qualifications. Many cases have arisen and have been decided by this and by the courts of other states recognizing the exceptions which at times arise, each case depending upon its particular facts.
The evidence tends to show that the driver of the team which was killed did twice look to see if a train was approaching, the first time when about one hundred and fifty feet from the crossing, and the second time fifty feet nearer it. He testified that at neither time did he see or hear the train, and that, although he listened for signals, none were given. He also testified that he knew that the train was due at or
The rule above stated is not intended as a means for excusing one from the exercise of ordinary care, a duty which is at all times imposed by law upon one approaching a railway crossing which is dangerous, but it is an element of fact or circumstance entering into the ultimate question whether such duty was obsei’ved. Cases arise where such reliance may not be placed upon the railroad company to meet that duty, and
Considering the facts presented in this case, the rate of speed at which the train was moving being forty or forty-five miles an hour, using no steam, with no exhaust, the claimed absence of signals, which the jury found were not given, the fact that the driver looked twice as he approached the track and discovered no danger, that he was listening for the usual signals and did not hear them, together with what the evidence shows to be the topography of the situation, which is fairly to be considered, there is presented a condition which does not permit the finding that no other conclusion than that of his own negligence could reasonably be reached.
The record is such that we must find that there was no error on the part of the trial court in submitting the ease to the jury, and the judgment is Affirmed.