172 F. 328 | 3rd Cir. | 1909
John Flannelly and Mary Ellen Flannelly, his wife, the defendants in error, brought an action of trespass in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, against the Delaware and Hudson Company, the plaintiff in error, hereinafter called the defendant, to recover damages for bodily injuries to Mrs. Flannelly, the loss to her husband of her services, and the injury and destruction of certain personal property through the negligence, as alleged, of the defendant. It is alleged in substance in the statement of claim, among other things,
“so negligently operated its freight trains upon said tracks as to destroy the usual opport unity at said crossing, to see or hear approaching trains and then did negligently and unlawfully run her down by a rapidly propelled passenger train, commonly called the ‘Flyer,’ which train was behind time and was being run at said time at great and unreasonable speed, and negligently approached said crossing without due and timely warning of its approach.’’
The case was tried before a jury and a verdict was found as follows :
“The .fury do And in the above case in favor of the plaintiff, Mary Flannelly in the sum of .$2,000, and in favor of John Flannelly in the sum of $500.00. Defendant company was negligent; in failing to sound the blast of a whistle at the proper place and at the proper time at the crossing of the defendant where the plaintiff Mary Flannelly received her injuries.”
A motion for judgment non obstante veredicto was denied and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs was entered on the verdict. The assigments of error though six in number raise in substance only the two following questions: First, was there or not sufficient evidence of actionable negligence on the part of the defendant to justify the jury in finding its existence? And, secondly, if the defendant was guilty of such negligence, did or not contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff so clearly appear that the court below was bound to render judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto? The counsel for the defendant at the hearing virtually abandoned, and, we think, properly, the contention that it had not been culpably negligent, and treat as “the real and vital point in the case” the question of contributory negligence. There is evidence in the case to the effect that Mrs. Flannelly oti the morning of July 30, 1907, was driving a horse attached to a light lumber wagon, in which she and two small boys were riding, on her way from her home in Pittston township, Luzerne county, Pennsylvania, to the city of Pittston, about five miles distant; that to reach her destination she proceeded on a public highway which ran through the village of Dupont or Smith-ville; that in pursuing this route it was necessary to cross at grade the railway tracks of the defendant from east to west and, in approaching those tracks, to cross at grade the double tracks of the Lehigh Valley Railroad “cut-off” distant from the defendant’s tracks several hundred feet; that the defendant’s tracks were three in number and at the crossing parallel to each other and running in a generally northerly and southerly direction; that on the westerly side of the defendant’s tracks and in close proximity to them there was a switch or branch track of the Lehigh Valley Railroad extending to a coal breaker about half a mile north of the crossing; that between-the Lehigh Valley Railroad “cut-off” and the defendant’s tracks and at the distance of between 20 and 50 feet from the latter there was a place where persons, driving such a conveyance as that occupied by Mrs. Flannelly, usually stopped to look and listen before undertaking
.'“.Whether Mrs. Flannelfy was delayed on the second track by unmanageable behavior on the part of the horse she was driving was a question for the jury. It is to be assumed that the jury believed she was. Had it not been for that delay the accident undoubtedly would not have happened. But this circumstance does not necessarily negative the existence of contributory negligence on her part operating as a proximate cause of the accident. She had, it is true, a right in the pursuit of her lawful journey to Pittston to use the public highway notwithstanding the fact that in so doing she would cross the defendant’s tracks. It was expected and intended that the public using that highway should pass over the crossing. Otherwise the crossing would not have been placed there. But she was bound under existing conditions to exercise due care and circumspection in attempting to pass over the defendant’s second track. There is uricontra-dicted testimony to the effect that while Mrs. Plannelly was accustomed to- driving horses, the horse driven by her at the time of the accident was “kinder skittish sometimes.” If, however, she in all respects observed reasonable care and caution in attempting to cross the tracks, we should not be prepared to hold that-unmanageable behavior on the part of the horse, whether attributable to a restive or excitable nature or to the noise of passing trains, should be imputed to her as a fault. But from a careful examination of the evidence before us it is clear beyond all reasonable doubt that Mrs. Flannelly did not observe such care and circumspection as the law required
“Q. You say wliile you were stopped there before you went on the track, that a train passed on the 1). & li. on the nearest track to you? A. Yes, sir. Q. You are very sure about that? A. I know the train passed on that track. Q. It was going towards I’ittston? A. Yes, sir. Q. That is, going southerly? A. Yes, it was going towards Pittston. * * * Q. IIow far had the train that was on the track nearest to you gone over the crossing, before you started to go over? A. Towards the shanty. Q. What did you say? A. Towards the shanty — the flag shanty, some kind of a shanty was there — there was a little shanty there. Q. Would you say it was a hundred feet? A. 1 could not say that, it might; have been more than a hundred feet; I couldn’t say that for certain. Q. Would you say it was as much as two hundred feet? A. I might if L was there and took an interest; 1 haven't been there and took an interest of it since. Q. Yon started to go across that track? A. Yes, sir. Q. This train which was going down on the track nearest to you cut off your view way down the road, did it not? A. Yes, sir, cut off my view until 1 got on the second track — when Hie horse was on, and the engine pushing right towards me from up the valley — X couldn't make escape.”
Here, then, was a woman of maturity, of sound mind, familiar with the crossing, knowing that from the usual stopping place she could see, in the absence of any obstruction, a train approaching from the south as far away as the viaduct or even further, who waited until the train of box-cars shut off her view to the south, and did not wait, notwithstanding the manifest danger of such an omission, until the defendant’s tracks were sufficiently clear to enable her to cross them in safety. Ft is hard to conceive of a more negligent or reckless disregard of one’s safety than was displayed by her in attempting to-cross the defendant’s tracks at the particular time she did and under the then existing conditions. Further, on her own showing, un-contradicted in the case, she failed to observe due care not only in undertaking to cross the tracks before she bad an unobstructed view of them to the south, but in starting as she did from her first stop
“Q. How far could you see down the second track, when you stopped the second time with your horse’s feet about the first track? A. To the nearest of my judgment, X should think about three hundred feet.”
With this limited scope of''vision it was perilous to the last degree to attempt to cross the second track as she did. She states that at the point of her second stop where she had only this limited view of the track to the south she “looked and listened up and down the track” before starting. That this was an utterly inadequate precaution is palpable in view of the fact that a train coming up the second track at the rate of- 50 or 60 miles an hour would cover from 73 to 88 feet each second. But we do not attach so much importance to what Mrs. Flannelly did after reaching the first track as to what she did before. The horse she was driving may have become excited by the noise of passing trains and unmanageable, and she may have lost her presence of mind and resorted to mistaken tactics. The fatal error she committed was in leaving the “usual place” and getting on the tracks before she had an unobstructed view. Her uncontradicted statements disclose contributory negligence • on her part. There was nothing in the case to warrant a verdict based upon an absence of all contributory negligence, and as there was nothing to warrant such a verdict the motion for judgment non obstante veredicto should have been granted.
The judgment below must be reversed, with costs, and it is so ordered.