34 N.Y.S. 279 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
On the 6th day of August, 1894, as the plaintiff’s intestate was proceeding on a highway to cross the defendant’s railroad, he was struck by a passing train and killed. The plaintiff charges that the disaster was occasioned solely by the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff was nonsuited at the trial.
The occurrence was about 9 o’clock in the evening, and it was then quite dark. It was in the town of Gates, county of Monroe, and the highway was known as the “Field Road.” The defendant’s tracks crossing the road were four, numbered from the south to the north. The deceased, on foot, approached the tracks from the north. There was then a train of coal cars standing on track number 2 over the crossing. After waiting some minutes, and as the «coal train was not moved, he proceeded to cross by climbing over between cars, and when he jumped from the train onto the south side of it he was struck by a train going east on track number 1: It seems that there was no engine attached to the coal train, and that it remained there for some time, and was an obstruction to the passage in the road over the railroad tracks. The .defendant was chargeable with negligence for permitting the coal train to remain the length of time that it had been there at the time of the accident, and the inference is fairly justified that he would have safely passed over the tracks before the train arrived if that obstruction to his passage had not been there. In that sense the megligence of the defendant was a cause of the death. But this
This was a rural section of the county, and the fact that the colliding train was running at the rate of 55 or 60 miles an hour was not in itself negligence on the part of the defendant.
The evidence was not sufficient to enable the jury to find that no signal was. given, and to impute negligence for the want of it. The two persons who were at the crossing for some little time before and at the time the train passed did not assume to know that none was given. One of them said that he heard nothing of the train, any whistle, or bell before he saw it crossing the highway, and added that he did not know whether the bell was rung or not; that he was on the south side about 30 feet away from the track attending to his horse, waiting for the removal of the coal train from the crossing. The other person, who was on the south side of the coal train, and with Dubois at the time the latter proceeded to pass over, testified that as the decedent was climbing onto the coal train he heard a whistle; that he could not tell what whistle it was; “it must have been the train that was coming east, but I ain’t certain of that; it might have been the other engine for all I know;” that he could not say that he had heard the train until it passed at the crossing, because there were other engines “steaming” about there. No negligence of the defendant to which the injury is imputable as the proximate cause appears, unless in permitting the coal train to stand at the crossing.
Some evidence was furnished tending to prove freedom of Dubois from contributory negligence, or to relieve him of such imputation, which might otherwise exist He was struck immediately after he passed from the coal train. He evidently did not see the approaching train before he jumped to the ground, although the evidence tends to prove that before doing so he looked to the west and to the east. Unless his view was otherwise obstructed, he could have seen it, as the engine had a headlight and the track to the west was
It is true that the speed of the train was such that it passed over considerable space in a brief time. But when he was standing upon'the coal train it does not appear what, if anything, there was to confuse or obstruct his view of the approach of the headlight of the train on the adjacent track. And it is difficult on the evidence to see how he was enabled to throw himself in front of the train in such proximity to it without the want of reasonable care on his part. While he was on the coal train there was nothing to disturb or deny to him deliberation or the exercise of his faculties. His opportunity then no less permitted, than his purpose to cross the track required, him to take careful observation, and satisfy himself that it was safe to do so, before proceeding to cross the track. If he had done this, no apparent reason is disclosed by the evidence why the calamity would not have been avoided. As the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove that the negligence of her intestate did not contribute to the disaster, that fact, as well as the negligence of the defendant, must be made to appear by evidence direct or inferential. For the reasons before given, the charge of negligence of the defendant as the cause of the death does not seem to have been supported by the evidence, nor does it fairly permit the inference that the decedent was free from contributory negligence. The motion for a new trial should be denied, and judgment directed. for the defendant. All concur.