138 Minn. 267 | Minn. | 1917
The plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered upon the order granting the defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding after verdict in favor of the plaintiff in a personal injury suit.
It is not affirmatively shown that Gorgenson did not go back to the east to warn oncoming trains nor does it affirmatively appear that he did. The fact is of importance only as it bears upon the question whether the trainmen should have supposed him to be at the rear of the train where he might be hurt by its movement. There is evidence that for some time, measured in minutes, just before the accident, he was at the rear of the train doing nothing in particular and that when the train backed, not being attentive to the situation, he was struck. There is the testimony of a witness, who reached him immediately after the accident, that “he said he was going to hang a Tight on the car and they backed up.” This is the only evidence that Gorgenson was about to place the light. The red lantern which it was customary to use was in the caboose after the accident. While the evidence is slight we assume it to be sufficient, if believed, to show that the deceased was in the act of hanging a light when injured or preparing to do so.
The conductor gave the signal to back and the engine backed without sounding the whistle. The court submitted to the jury the question whether the trainmen should have known that the deceased might be at the rear of the train and in a place of danger so that it was negligent to back without giving him notice. In granting, the motion for judgment notwithstanding the court expressed its views as follows: “From the evidence the court is of the opinion that the train crew were not charged with notice, nor could they, in the exercise of ordinary care, have had
We are of a like opinion. The rear section of the train had been standing for one hour and ten minutes. For substantially all that time it had been dusk or dark. The attaching of the light was but a moment’s work. It involved no difficulty nor was it attended with particular danger. Considering the -length of the stop and the very short time required to place the light we are unable to see that the trainmen were wanting in ordinary care in not anticipating that the deceased might be placing the light and in a place of peril at the precise time when they caused the train to back. The case of Thompson v. Minneapolis & St. Louis R. Co. 133 Minn. 203, 158 N. W. 42, is so different in its facts that it is not illustrative.
Judgment affirmed.