The action is for the recovery of damages alleged to have accrued to the plaintiff by reason of being struck 'by an engine while attempting to cross the defendant’s railroad track. The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury, '“that on all the evidence in the case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.” This is, in effect, a motion for a verdict, and sufficiently states the ground of the motion; and, by excepting to the refusal of the court to' comply with the request, the defendant has reserved for the consideration of this Court the •question of whether, upon the most favorable view for the plaintiff of all the evidence, he was entitled to> recover.
The plaintiff gave evidence tending to show, that he walked from the public crossing through the railroad yard of the defendant, along the side of a line of box cars some two hundred and thirty feet, and then passed the end of the line of box cars; that he looked to' the right and left, went right along and attempted to cross the defendant’s main line and, in so doing, was struck, by the defendant’s express train, coming from1 the west; that, as he passed the end of the box cars, he could see toward the west a distance of the length of two or three cars; and that he knew it was about time for the express to arrive and was dangerous to be on the track. The actual measurements of the surveyor, which were disputed only by estimates, from, the position of a man stepping over the north rail, show that a person could see one hundred and eighty-eight feet along the north rail, and two¡ hundred and twenty-three feet along the south rail; The train made a good deal of noise, and, upon the shout of warning from by-standers, the plaintiff did not quicken his pace in any way, but .looked up, not in the direction of the approaching train, but in the direction of those who called to him; and, at the time he was struck, lie was stepping over the last rail — had one foot over.
The case of Batchelder v. Boston & Maine R. R. Co., recently decided by the Supreme Court of New Hampshire, and reported in
The plaintiff relies upon the case of Willey v. The Boston & Maine R. R. Co.,
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.
