8 Ill. App. 571 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1881
There is no view of the evidence we are able to take which does not charge the plaintiff and her husband with gross negligence. Ordinary experience and judicial decisions without number concur in declaring railway crossings, where trains of cars are frequently passing, to be places of great danger, and the rule has accordingly been laid down and frequently repeated by our Supreme Court, that “ it is the duty of persons about to cross a railroad to look about them and see if there is danger; not to go recklessly upon the road, but to take the proper precautions themselves to avoid accidents at such places. If a party rushes into danger which by ordinary care he could have seen and avoided, no rule of law or justice can be invoked to compensate him for any injury he may so receive.” C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Gretzner, 46 Ill. 74; C. R. I. & P. R. R. Co. v. Bell, 70 Id. 102; C. & N. W. R. W. Co. v. Ryan, Id. 211; C. & R. I. R. R. Co. v. Still, 19 Id. 499; C. B. & Q. R. R. Co. v. Harwood, 80 Id. 88; L. S. & M. S. R. R. Co. v. Hart, 87 Id. 529; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Hetherington, 83 Id. 510; St. L. A. & T. H. R. R. Co. v. Manly, 58 Id. 300; C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Jacobs, 63 Id. 178; C. & N. W. R. W. Co. v. Hatch, 79 Id. 137; C. & N. W. R. W. Co. v. Dimick, 96 Id. 42. Thus it is held to be culpable negligence for any person to cross the track of a railroad without looking in every direction in which the rails run, to make sure that the road is clear. I. C. R. R. Co. v. Goddard, 72 Ill. 567; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Hetherington, sufra.
The plaintiff and her husband were both familiar with the crossing in question. They knew its situation and were well aware of the dangers by which it was surrounded. They were riding in a covered market-wagon, with the side coverings ail down, so that, with the exception of certain small apertures or windows through the curtains, their view on either side was obstructed; and from the place where they sat, they could not, without leaning considerably forward, see objects approaching them from the right hand or left. Their attention was called to the fact that a train might be approaching, as "both claim to have looked for cars before starting, and to have been listening for the sound-of an approaching train while passing from the .post-office to the crossing. The clear preponderance of the evidence shows that they drove their horse on a trot and there is no pretense that after starting, either the plaintiff or her husband looked, or attempted to look for a train, or that they either stopped or slackened their speed for the purpose of either looking or listening, but drove directly in front of the engine as it came to the crossing.
It is argued that the defendant was guilty of negligence in placing its cars on the intervening side-tracks, so as to obscure the view of approaching trains, and that the plaintiff and her husband were thereby in a corresponding degree excused from the duty of looking for trains before attempting to cross the main-track. In our opinion neither of these propositions is tenable. The defendant had an undoubted legal right to place its cars on its side-tracks, and to allow them to stand there for such time as the exigencies of its business required. That is one of the main purposes for which such tracks are constructed, and their proper and legitimate use cannot of itself render the railway company obnoxious to the charge of negligence. Hor did the fact that cars were standing on these tracks, justify the plaintiff or her husband in relaxing, to any degree, the care and vigilance which the law required them to exercise in order to foresee and avoid danger. The intervening cars in no way, diminished the apparent danger. The probability that a train might be approaching was not lessened in the least. True, the difficulties in the way of foreseeing its approach were in some degree increased, but that fact imposed upon persons approaching the crossing the duty of exercising a higher degree of vigilance in ascertaining whether it was prudent to cross the track.
But the evidence shows that notwithstanding all these obstructions, the train was in plain view at the time the plaintiff’s husband drove on to the main track; so that if he had but just glanced in the direction from which it was approaching, he would have seen it in time to avoid the collision. There can be no question that when he reached the southerly side-track a point at least twenty-five feet from the main-track, his view along the main-track in an easterly direction was entirely open and unobstructed to a point considerably east of the passenger station, a distance of four or five hundred feet. This appears not only from the evidence as to the topography of the grounds and the location of surrounding objects, but Leonard Quail, a brakeman on the traifi, testifies that, at and just prior to the time of the collision, he was sitting in the rear coach of the train, with his head out of the window and looking forward, the train being composed of the engine, one baggage car, and four passenger coaches, and that the horse and wagon came within his view when crossing the side-track, about twenty feet, as he thinks, from the main-track, which obviously must have been when they were crossing the southerly side-track. If the horse and wagon, when twenty feet or more from the main-track, were visible to a person at the rear of this train, nearly or quite three hundred feet in length, it is manifest that the engine was in plain view of the plaintiff and her husband at the same time, if they had only looked, and it seems highly probable that it came within the range of their vision, so that they might have seen it somewhat earlier.
If up to that time the view of the track was wholly or partially obscured, so as to leave them at all in doubt, as to their safety in attempting to cross, it was only the dictate of the most ordinary prudence to look along the track the instant the intervening objects were passed, and become assured of their safety before proceeding. Had they done so, they would have seen the train, and the distance was such as to have afforded ample opportunity to stop and avoid injury. But instead of this, the horse was driven on a trot across the side-tracks and on to the main-track, the plaintiff and her husband sitting so far back in their covered wagon that the witness, Quail, could see neither of them, and of course so far back that their own view of the approaching train was entirely obscured, and no attempt whatever was made by them or either of them, by looking, stopping, listening, or otherwise, to ascertain whether it was safe to proceed, an approaching train being in full view, and within a few yards of them. Such neglect on their part of all those precautions which reasonable and ordinary care and prudence would have suggested,' was gross negligence, and must bar a recovery, unless the evidence establishes willful or wanton negligence on the part of the defendant.
The negligence charged against the defendant was, 1, leaving its cars standing on its side-tracks, so as to obscure the view of approaching trains; 2, failing to sound a whistle or ring a bell on the engine; and, 3, running its train at too high a rate of speed through the village of Desplaines. The first of these charges has already been noticed. As to the second, we need only say that the clear and manifest preponderance of the evidence shows that a bell was rung and whistle sounded for the requisite distance before reaching the crossing in question. As to the third charge, we see nothing in the evidence warranting the conclusion that the rate of speed was such as to show wanton or willful negligence. The most satisfactory estimate of the rate of speed, and the one which the jury doubtless adopted, was that given by the engineer, viz, twenty-five miles per hour. It does not appear that Desplaines was an incorporated village, or that there was any municipal ordinance in force, regulating the speed at which trains should be run. This train had been run through this village at this rate of speed, daily, for several months at least. The exigencies of the defendant’s business, it will be presumed, required that it should be so run. The evidence shows that on the occasion in question the employes in charge of the engine were duly attentive to their duties, and seeking to run the train with a .proper regard for the safety of the public. The engineer on approaching the village applied the air-brake, so as to reduce the speed while passing through the village, considerably below that at which the train was run in the country. Now, while it may be that [running at twenty-five miles an hour through this village was negligent, we cannot think that, under the circumstances, it argued either a reckless or wanton disregard of the safety of the public, or a willful attempt to injure the plaintiff.
We are unable to see,-then, how the jury under the evidence could have arrived at any different verdict. If they had found the defendant guilty of wanton or willful negligence, their finding would, in our opinion, have been in that respect entirely unsupported by the evidence. If they had failed to find the plaintiff'and her husband guilty of gross negligence, their verdict would have been contrary to'the clear preponderance of the evidence, and it would doubtless have been the duty of the court below to set it aside for that reason. As their verdict was the only one warranted by the evidence, it is clear that the plaintiff was not prejudiced by any errors in the instructions.
Some of the instructions, we think, are erroneous. Thus, the second instruction is incorrect in its statement or definition of what would constitute wanton or willful negligence on the part of the defendant; but as there is no evidence tending to charge the defendant with negligence of that character, this error could not have injured the plaintiff. The same instruction lays down the proposition that no neglect of duty on the part of the defendant could relieve or excuse the plaintiff on approaching the crossing from the full and free use of her senses of sight and hearing, if they would have been availing, in order to avoid the accident in question. As a general proposition of law this is much too broad. The defendant might have been guilty of negligence of such a character as would have lulled the plaintiff into a sense of security, and justified her in relaxing in some degree the vigilance which she would otherwise have been bound to exercise. But in this case, no negligence of that character is shown, and as applied to the peculiar circumstances of this case, the instruction is in this 'respect substantially correct.
The third instruction is objectionable, as being to some extent an argument upon a mere question of fact. This would have been a serious error if the evidence as to the facts discussed had been conflicting. But as there is no conflict, the facts involved being substantially undisputed, the jury could not have been misled or embarrassed thereby.
The eleventh and thirteenth instructions lay down, as a rule of law, that it was the duty of the plaintiff’s husband to stop as well as look and listen before attempting to cross the railroad. Although the courts of some of the States have adopted this rule, it has never been recognized here, and we are disinclined to yield it our sanction. It is a rule of law of general application, that all persons are bound to exercise reasonable and ordinary care and prudence to foresee danger and avoid injury. The degree of care which this rule imposes is, of course, proportioned to the degree of apparent danger, and where the situation is one of great danger, as is usually the case with the crossing of a railroad over a public highway, ordinary care and prudence requires the party to be on the alert, so as to make a prudent use of his senses of sight and hearing, as well as of all such other expedients as the circumstances of the case may suggest, to secure his own safety. What these expedients may be in any given case, must always be a question of fact to be detei mined by the circumstances. Whether in the present case it was the duty of the plaintiff’s husband before going on to the track, to bring his horse to a halt and thus look and listen, was not a question of law to be determined by the court, but a question of fact for the jury-
But viewing it as a mere question of fact, we think the evidence was such as to warrant and even necessitate the conclusion that he should have stopped. We think no prudent man, under the circumstances, would have failed so to do. These instructions, then, although they in effect decided for the jury a mere question of fact, and so were clearly erroneous, decided it in a way so completely warranted by all the evidence in the case, that no material injury to the plaintiff can have resulted therefrom.
There is another respect in which several of the instructions are liable to serious criticism. Not only are they argumentative in some places, but what is a more serious fault, they abound in strong, mandatory and coercive expressions, which could only have tended to interfere with the free and unbiased consideration by the jury of the facts appearing in evidence. Thus in the fourth instruction, the jury are told that if they find certain facts from the evidence, “ The jury have no discretion in the matter one way or the other, they must find for the defendant. ” The same mandate is repeated in the same language in the thirteenth instruction. In several of the instructions the .jury are told that, if certain facts are proved, “ The jury must find the defendant not guilty. ” In the second instruction it is held that certain facts if shown by the evidence, “ Conclusively prove negligence ” on the part of the plaintiff. Such language in instructions is always objectionable and should be avoided. The law should be given to the jury in such terms as will leave them in the discharge of their appropriate functions, free from all interference or coercion, and enable them to decide all questions of fact upon their own independent and unbiased judgment, without suggestion, or dictation by the court.
We are of the opinion, however, that, notwithstanding the errors in the instructions, the verdict of the jury executes justice, and that the judgment should be affirmed. It ¿s a familiar rule, supported hy numerous decisions of the Supreme Court, that a judgment will not be reversed for errors in the instructions, if it is manifest from the whole record that the jury could not have been misled, and that justice has been done. Had the jury in this case been properly instructed in all respects, we do not think they could have reached any dif ferent conclusion. It would be idle then for us to award a new trial, which, judging from the present record, could result in no benefit to the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.