242 F. 468 | 6th Cir. | 1917
Mr. and Mrs. Fluckey, in an automobile which he was driving northerly along a street in Memphis, undertook to cross the tracks of the Southern Railway Company. A gasoline motor car, operated by the railway in interurban service was ap-' proa ching from the west. There was a collision, in which Mr. Fluckey was killed and his wife hurt. She brought this suit in the court below to recover damages, and, after a trial, the court directed a verdict for the defendant, upon the ground of contributory negligence. She brings the case here on error, claiming that the queston of contributory negligence was for the jury, and that the negligence of the railway company
The case involves no question of imputing to a passenger the negligence of a driver, because Mrs. Fluckey testifies that she had assumed die duty of looking out for danger at this crossing and was undertaking to give any warnings that might be necessary. In this respect, as well as upon the general subject, the facts of this case bear very close analogy to those passed upon by this court in Erie R. R. v. Hurlbert, 221 Fed. 907, 137 C. C. A. 477.
It has been decided by the highest court of Tennessee that the violation of a city ordinance in a manner contributing to' a collision of this kind is not merely evidence of negligence, but is negligence per se. Ry. v. Haynes, 112 Tenn. 712, 81 S W. 374. Whether this holding is so far a matter of statutory construction that it binds this court, or whether it pertains rather to a question of general law, we need not decide; for present purposes, we accept it as the correct rule. No one claims, however, that the violation of a single ordinance is even evidence of wanton or willful negligence; and, indeed, no reason is suggested upon which such a claim could have been based.
To keep cars standing on side tracks back ISO feet away from a crossing is a measure of extreme prudence, and cannot be said to be demandéd by ordinary and reasonable care in all cases — if, indeed, it is, usually. We are clear that the mere breaking of this rule does not of itself indicate any extreme negligence; and whatever violation there was in the present case was practically, if not wholly, without causal connection with the injury, since the standing car in question did not project beyond the line of vision between the edge of the building on the corner and the point 120 feet down the track.
Running a train of cars or a single car at a reckless and dangerous speed over an unguarded and obstructed crossing, might, under some circumstances, indicate wantonness. That is not before us; but, in this case, the ordinance limit was 6 miles an hour, the same ordinances permit street cars on the city streets to run 20 miles an hour, and this car was not exceeding 12 miles an hour. That speed for an interurban car is not, in truth, of itself, reckless or wanton negligence; and even if an ordinance limiting such speed to 6 miles an hour is valid, and even if running at 12 miles an hour is per se negligence, we are confident that is the utmost inference which should be drawn merely from the speed.
We must not be understood as intimating that a concurrent violation of two or more city ordinances might not tend to show gross negligence; but we think this conclusion would come, not as a matter of arithmetic merely, but as a result of the character of the ordinances and the nature of the violations in a given case, considered either separately or compositely; and we might well add that, in the present case, not only was no act involved inherently indicating wantonness or willfulness, but the evidence is substantially undisputed that the motorman was vigilant, was using his whistle and his bell seasonably, and saw the automobile and put on his brakes at the earliest possible instant. The case is not one where the railroad was “kicking” a car across a highway without warning of any nature, nor does it involve any other act of such grossly careless nature.
The District Court was right in declining to submit these questions to the jury. The judgment is affirmed.