50 A. 146 | N.H. | 1900
The crossing upon which the plaintiff was injured was not a public highway, but was maintained by the defendants the use which the plaintiff was attempting to make of it. He had the right to cross upon it. The defendants had also the right to use it for the passage of their trains. As each could not exercise the common right to the use of the crossing at the same moment of time without serious injury to one or both as the inevitable result, each party was bound to exercise care to prevent such attempt at the simultaneous exercise of their common right. As the right to the use was equal, an equal obligation to exercise care rested upon each. Huntress v. Railroad,
The precautions to be taken in each case are affected by the character of the other's use. If each party came to a full stop just before reaching the common way, the entire danger would be avoided. If such stop were equally easy or difficult in each case, prudence would require the same course of each, as is required in certain cases in the use of a common crossing by passenger trains on different railroads. P. S., c. 159, s. 10. But as the foot-passenger can as a practically invariable rule stop instantly and without inconvenience, while the train cannot as a rule stop except considerable distance, and then only with difficulty and inconvenience, it would be unreasonable to expect or require that when both are approaching the common point the train should stop and allow the foot-passenger to pass. The train has the precedence and the right of way. Continental Improvement Co. v. Stead,
In the present case the plaintiff's conduct is fully disclosed. As to his acts or omissions there is no dispute; the only question is whether the undisputed facts afford evidence of care. The plaintiff before attempting to cross the track, in order to fulfill the burden of care Resting upon him, was bound "to take such precautions to learn of the approach of trains as men of ordinary prudence would take in like circumstances." Smith v. Railroad, ante, p. 53. What prudent men would or would not do in a given situation depends upon all the circumstances disclosed. "The railroad cannot be held to the same speed, or the traveler to the same conduct, in all cases. What would be proper conduct in one situation might *445
be improper in another. Hence no definite rule or test can be laid down, but each case must be governed by the facts appearing in it." Roberts v. Railroad,
The question, therefore, is whether reasonable men could or might conclude that the plaintiff exercised due care to avoid collision by which he was injured. In this case such conclusion would be unreasonable, because there is no evidence that the plaintiff exercised any care whatever. The plaintiff, in the noon hour of a bright, clear summer day, with nothing to obstruct his view of the track or the train, or to abstract his attention, or engross or stupefy his senses, compelled to act by no sudden emergency or danger, without mistake or misapprehension as to the speed of the train, deliberately walked upon a railroad crossing within a railroad yard, over which he knew trains and shifting engines were frequently passing, stepping almost directly in front of the train by which he was struck. The plaintiff was forty-three years of age, in full possession of his faculties. There is no evidence that he was either drunk or crazy. He took no precautions, as he was legally bound to do, to avoid the danger which he knew might arise upon the crossing at any moment. He testified that he did not make any effort to ascertain if the train was coming, and did not think it was. He neither stopped, looked, listened, or thought of the danger. If any one of these acts would have furnished *446 evidence of care, he did none of them. There is no other evidence from which care could be inferred. He not only did nothing to protect himself, but was in fact acting without attention to his situation. He was thoughtless and careless when his duty to the railroad as well as to himself required him to be thoughtful and careful. It was said in Smith v. Railroad, ante, Jo. 53: "It certainly must be as apparent to jurymen as to members of the court that a person of average prudence will, under most circumstances, look or listen for a train when about to pass over a grade crossing." In the absence of such evidence of care and of any other evidence tending to show care, it is clear there is nothing for the jury on the question of the plaintiff's care.
In this case the plaintiff fails because, being bound to prove his own care, he presents no evidence tending to prove the issue. The question is not taken from the jury because, as is sometimes said, in the state of the proof the question of negligence is for the court; but it is not submitted to the jury because upon the evidence there is no disputed question of fact to be determined. The plaintiff, having offered no evidence tending to prove his exercise of care, was properly nonsuited unless a special rule exists in this state for the trial of crossing cases relieving the plaintiff from the obligation which exists in all other actions for negligence. It is claimed that under the law in this state "a case cannot be conceived, short of deliberate suicide, where it is not open to a jury to find in a level crossing accident that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care.; meaning, as we understand the claim, that in a crossing case the question of the plaintiff's care is always submitted to the jury, regardless of the character of the evidence. While the cases have differed, as they necessarily must, in the evidence presented, no case has been submitted to the jury without evidence of facts from which it was considered care might reasonably be found. If there be any in which this conclusion may properly be subject to criticism, there are none in which it has been suggested that the jury were authorized to find care without evidence.
In State v. Railroad,
In Smith v. Railroad, Davis v. Railroad, and State v. Railroad, exceptions to the refusal to instruct the jury as matter of law, in substance, that it is the duty of every one approaching along a highway to the crossing of a steam railroad to listen and look both ways along the railroad before going' upon it, and that the failure of the traveler to look and listen was negligence precluding his recovery, were overruled, full general instructions upon the subject having been given. The refusal to declare certain acts or omissions negligence under all circumstances was an application of the law of negligence generally to this class of cases. Ricker v. Hall,
It is urged that the plaintiff relied upon the ringing of the bell, and that the failure to give the warning signals (of which there was some evidence which must here be taken to be true) excused him from the exercise of vigilance. Though the plaintiff testified that he did not look to see if a train was approaching because he expected to hear the whistle or bell if there was, it cannot be claimed that he was consciously at the time placing any reliance thereon, for he further testifies that he had no thought of a train coming and did not listen for the bell. As his counsel state in their brief, "There was no positive effort, no conscious, `harking' or `listening,' to ascertain if the train was coming." But assuming that it might be found as a fact that he did rely on the awakening of his consciousness by the performance of the railroad's duty of warning, the failure of the defendants to perform their duty did not release him from his. The obligation to use care was equally imposed upon each. If the defendants' negligence excused the plaintiff from his duty of care, the plaintiff's negligence with equal reason would excuse the defendants. If the plaintiff had the right to assume the defendants would perform their duty, and, relying thereon, approach the crossing without exercising care, the defendants had the right to assume that the plaintiff would perform his duty, and omit the warning of bell and whistle. The duty of care rested on each equally. If neither performed that duty both are in fault, and neither can recover of the other. The collision in this case resulted, it may be, because neither party performed their duty. If either had, there might and probably would have been no accident. The rights and liabilities of the parties consequent upon their acts resulting in the collision are not affected by the fact that subsequently one is plaintiff and the other defendant in a suit growing out of the collision. Their several responsibility is fixed at the time by their acts or failure to act. A suit by the engineer against Gahagan for personal injury resulting from the collision would present precisely the same legal question as that we now have. It would hardly be urged that the engineer was not guilty of contributory negligence in failing to ring the bell because he relied upon Gahagan's performance of his duty of stopping and allowing the train to go by. The negligence of neither is an excuse for concurrent want of care in the other, because for an injury resulting from the concurrent *449
negligence of both neither can recover. Nashua Iron and Steel Co. v. Railroad,
The rule is laid down in Railroad Co. v. Houston,
The case of Mitchell v. Railroad,
It is not claimed that after the plaintiff stepped upon the track almost immediately in front of the approaching train the defendants could have prevented the injury, or that the employees in charge of the train, when the danger thus became imminent, did not do all that could be done to prevent the collision. At any time before this the plaintiff could have avoided the collision. There was no moment when the defendants could, while the plaintiff could not, have prevented the injury. The plaintiff's act in stepping upon the track, without precaution to ascertain whether he could safely do so, was the last act in point of time in the causation producing the injury. As there was no evidence upon which it could reasonably be found that the plaintiff's action in this respect was the exercise of care, he cannot recover unless upon the evidence some negligent act or omission of the defendants' *450
employees could be found to be the sole proximate cause of the injury. The plaintiff's negligence in carelessly exposing his property or himself to danger is not the proximate cause of resulting injury if the defendants could, while the plaintiff could not for any reason, including his own negligence, have avoided the results of the plaintiff's want of care. "The contributory negligence of the party injured will not defeat the action if it be shown that the defendants might by the exercise of reasonable care and prudence have avoided the consequences of the injured party's negligence." Grand Trunk R'y v. Ives,
The plaintiff's negligent occupation of the track did not authorize the defendants to run upon and injure him, if by care they could have avoided it. Ordinarily, the negligent act or omission which fails to avoid the consequences of the plaintiff's negligence is the last act in time in the series leading to the injury. Such was the case in the cases cited; the negligent occupation of the track by the plaintiffs preceded the negligence of the defendants in failing to observe and guard against the danger so produced. But as ordinary care may require vigilance to guard against a dangerous situation reasonably to be apprehended, as well as actually imminent, it cannot always follow that the last negligent act in point of time is necessarily the proximate cause of the injury. If the engineer knew or ought to have known that the plaintiff's negligence would place him upon the crossing when the train reached it, the engineer was equally bound to avoid the collision as if he saw the plaintiff actually on the track. The question is one of evidence merely. The mere fact that the person when first seen is on the track is not decisive. If a person on foot is seen crossing the track at such distance ahead that it could not reasonably be apprehended that the train would reach him in this position, the engineer would not be in fault for not preparing to avoid a danger not reasonably to be expected. In the present case there is evidence *451 that when the plaintiff was first seen by the engineer the collision could have been prevented. If the engineer knew or ought to have known then that the plaintiff would be upon the crossing when the train reached it, and could have avoided the collision, his failure to do so is the proximate cause of the injury.
As there was evidence the collision might then have been prevented by him, the sole remaining question is whether upon the evidence reasonable men might find the engineer ought then to have foreseen the plaintiff's negligence. The bare fact that the plaintiff was seen approaching the track is not sufficient to authorize such a finding. If it were, the rule heretofore laid down and found to be approved by the authorities and the reason of the case, that it is the duty of the highway traveler to stop and allow the train to pass, would be reversed. It would become the duty of the train to stop and wait for the person on foot to go by. This would be unreasonable, impracticable, and put an end to the modern system of rapid transportation demanded by the public, and to effectuate which railroads are authorized by the state.
"The company's servants may ordinarily presume that a person apparently of full age and capacity, who is walking on the track some distance before the engine, will leave it in time to save himself from harm; or if approaching the track, that he will stop if it becomes dangerous for him to cross it. This presumption will not be justified under some circumstances, as when the person who is on the track appears to be intoxicated, asleep, or otherwise off his guard." Pierce R. R. 331; 2 Shearm. Red. Neg., s. 483; Chicago etc. R. R. v. Lee,
The case discloses no evidence apparent to the engineer taking the present case out of the rule. Without repeating all the facts which have been previously stated, it also appears that the plaintiff when seen was walking slowly, erect, with nothing peculiar about his appearance. This is the uncontradicted evidence from the witnesses. One witness stated that he was walking very slowly — about six miles an hour: but in the face of all the evidence and this witness' own description of the speed, it could not reasonably be found that he was proceeding other than at a slow walk. There was some conflict as to whether his face was turned toward the train or not, and one witness expressed the opinion that there was nothing about his appearance to indicate whether he saw the train or not. The plaintiff was in the full possession of all his faculties; he knew he was approaching the crossing; he was neither *452
drunk nor crazy; there were no external appearances indicating such a condition contrary to the fact. Aside from the plaintiff's own statement and the fact of the subsequent collision, the case contains no evidence that the plaintiff, when seen by the engineer approaching the crossing, was not alert to the situation, or tending to produce a belief that he would voluntarily rush into danger without care. Until he stepped upon the track his only danger consisted in the fact of his mental obliviousness to his duty of taking care. So defining his danger, the claim of his counsel, that if the engineer knew the plaintiff's danger he could have avoided the injury and is in fault for not doing so, is sound; but to submit to he jury the question of fact whether the engineer ought to have known the status of the plaintiff's mind in season to have prevented the accident, not only in the absence of evidentiary facts tending to prove such knowledge but in the face of all the facts open only to a contrary inference, would be a violation of the familiar and elementary rule that in judicial trials facts are to be found upon evidence, not conjecture. Deschenes v. Railroad,
The evidence upon which counsel mainly rely, tending to show that when seen by the engineer Gahagan's face was not turned toward the train and that his appearance did not indicate whether he saw the train or not, does not tend to establish that he proposed to rush carelessly into known danger, or that he would go upon the track without care to ascertain if a train was approaching. That Gahagan knew the crossing, its danger, and his approach to it, was conceded. Hence, in the face of this admitted fact, although this evidence may have some tendency to prove the contrary, the jury could not find that Gahagan did not know he was approaching a place of danger, or that the engineer ought to have inferred a fact which it is conceded did not exist. As there is no evidence that the defendants ought to have known the plaintiff's danger in season to have avoided the results of his negligence, they cannot be found guilty of negligence for not doing so. The testimony of the engineer, called as a witness by the plaintiff, as to the conclusions he in fact formed, may be laid entirely out of the case; for the material question is not what he did understand, but what he ought to have inferred.
"It has become a truism in the law of negligence that each case depends upon its facts." Wieland v. Canal Co.,
Exception overruled.
WALLACE and YOUNG, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred. *453