246 F. 800 | 3rd Cir. | 1918
A branch of the defendant’s railroad runs through the town of Garfield, N. J. On April 6, 1916, Edwin J. Hilt, Jr., one of the plaintiffs, a. boy less than seven years old, was run over and severely hurt on a switch track or siding near the station, and this suit is brought by his father and himself to recover damages for the injury.
At the place of the accident, there are two main tracks and a siding; trains run toward Jersey City on the east-bound track, and south of this track is the siding, which runs westward to the station and is used for the receipt and delivery of freight. On the day in question, nine cars stood on the siding — first, five empty cars near its junction with the east-bound track; then, two loaded coal cars, separated from the empty cars by an open space of 15 or 20 feet; the remaining two being loaded box cars, standing near the station and separated from the coal cars by a space of similar width. Immediately south of the siding there was open ground, about 20 feet wide and more than 350 feet long. This was chiefly used as a driveway to the station and the siding, but for a good many years it had been also used as a playground by children, some of them very young, who were accustomed to play on the open ground, on the siding itself, and over and about the cars that might be standing on the rails. This was a frequent practice, and was well known to the servants of the railroad. Sometimes the children would be driven or ordered away, but this had little effect on the practice, as there was no barrier to keep them off.
On April 6 a train consisting of an engine and twenty cars was moving toward Jersey City on the east-bound track. It had been ordered to pick up the five empty cars, and, as the train neared the junction of the siding with the east-bound track, the rear brakeman alighted from a car toward the rear of the train for the purpose of setting the switch. He descended on the southerly side of the train, between the east-bound track and the siding, and crossed the siding through the space between the coal cars and the empty cars, thus reaching the driveway. He testified that he looked up and down both rails of the siding, but saw no one. Thereupon he ran east and turned the switch, the train meanwhile having moved east and stopped at a point where its rear end was about 50 feet beyond the switch. The brakeman then gave the signal to back, and ran west along the north rail of the siding to the place where the empty cars were to be coupled. As
The boy had been playing marbles near the siding with a companion of his own age, who- was not called as a witness. A peddler, wlio was selling potatoes at a house in the neighborhood, saw the boys near the siding about five minutes before the accident, and told them to get away or they would be hurt; but he paid no further attention to the matter until he heard the coupling of cars and the cries of the injured boy just afterward, whereupon he hastened to the spot and found the boy lying on the ground close to the rail on the south .side of the siding, and close to the train, which was then standing still. The boy testified that he had been playing marbles for an hour before the accident, and that a marble had rolled under one of the five empty cars and was lying toward the north-rail of the siding. He tried to recover it,by reaching under the car'with his foot and pulling the marble toward him; but drew back quickly, because he thought the cars might be going tp move. He tried a second time, however, and while he was thus engaged the train backed in, and his left leg was so badly injured that amputation was necessary. At the trial no question was raised about the duty of the train to give notice of its movements by bell or whistle; the.plaintiffs.’ position was that the railroad’s testimony, already referred'to, could not be accepted, that the boy must have been visible, and that the brakeman was negligent in failing to see him and in failing to give him notice of the danger. Witnesses testified that both boys were seen at the spot immediately after the accident.
The father’s contributory negligence was also submitted in language to which no exception was taken.
No other assignment of error seems to need consideration, and' accordingly the judgment is
Affirmed.