Appellant seeks to recover damages for personal injuries, sustained in a collision between an automobile driven by him and one of appellee's cars, at a crossing of a public highway by the latter's track. The amended complaint is in a single paragraph, and is based on alleged negligence of appellee in the operation of said car, as it approached and passed over said crossing. The complaint was answered by a general denial, after which the cause was submitted to a jury for trial, resulting in a verdict and judgment for appellee. Appellant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and this appeal followed, based on the action of the court in so ruling.
The only reasons upon which appellant relies in support of his contention that the court erred in overruling his motion for a new trial relate to the action of the court in giving certain instructions. Instruction No. 3, given by the court on its own motion, reads as follows: *Page 462 "The law interprets ordinary care to be that degree of care which a person of ordinary prudence under the particular circumstances is presumed to exercise to avoid injury. Such care is required to be in proportion to the danger to be avoided and the fatal consequences that may result from the neglect."
Appellant contends that this instruction contains an erroneous definition of ordinary care, because of the presence of the last sentence therein. We do not so view it. If ordinary care 1-3. is such as the first sentence in the instruction states, which appellant does not challenge, we may add, as a matter of common knowledge, that the quantum of care used by persons of ordinary prudence, when acting as such, is in proportion to the dangers to be avoided and the injuries that may result if such care is not observed. Union Traction Co. v.Berry, Admr. (1919),
It is contended that the court erred in giving instruction No. 1, requested by appellee, for the following reasons: (1) It omits the element of proximate cause in defining contributory 4, 5. negligence. (2) It fails to state that appellant's negligence, in order to be such, must have concurred and co-operated with that of appellee. In support of the first reason it *Page 464
is urged that said instruction may have led the jury to return a verdict against appellant if it found that he had been guilty of any negligence, however remote, which merely helped to produce his injury, without contributing proximately thereto. It suffices to say, in answer to this, that if said instruction is erroneous in the particular first stated, appellant has failed to point out any evidence of remote negligence to which the jury may have applied the instruction, and thereby harmed appellant, as was his duty to do, if he seeks a reversal because the instruction would have permitted such an application. Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v.Reed (1909),
Instruction No. 2, given by the court on request of appellee, is challenged on the following grounds: (1) It calls the jury's attention to the fact that the presence of a railroad 6-9. crossing is a warning of danger when such a crossing is not involved in this action. (2) It places imperative duties upon a person about to cross a railroad track, which he is required to perform, although ordinary care might not so require. (3) It places a higher duty on appellant than the law requires, by the use of the italicized words in *Page 465
the following statement therein: "It is the duty of a person about to cross railroad tracks to use his eyes and ears * * * in such manner as that a person can, if possible in the exercise of ordinary care, see and hear." (Our italics.) (4) It erroneously states the following as a presumption of law, referring to a person about to cross a railroad track: "I instruct you that such person is presumed, in law, to have seen that which he could have seen by looking, in the exercise of ordinary care, and to hear that which he could hear, in the exercise of ordinary care." The instruction should not be held erroneous on the first ground stated, for the following reasons: Appellee's track was, in fact, a railroad track, notwithstanding cars were operated thereon by electricity instead of steam.Snow v. Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. (1911),
Complaint is made of the action of the court in giving instruction No. 3, requested by appellee. This instruction is not mandatory, and when read in connection with instruction No. 1, given on request of appellant, the objections made thereto, if valid when considered alone, are so far neutralized as to render its giving harmless. We say this, in view of the fact that said instruction No. 1 correctly defines the care to be used in operating cars over an interurban track at a highway crossing, and also states the conditions under which the speed of the car in question would be an element in determining appellee's liability. It is, therefore, only remotely probable, that the jury could have been misled by the use of the words "due regard" in the connection in which it is found in the instruction under consideration, or that the speed of the car might not be so great as to constitute negligence, under certain conditions. We conclude there was no error in giving said instruction.
Appellant also complains of the action of the court in giving instruction No. 4, requested by appellee. This instruction is not as well stated as it should have been, but its effect 10, 11. was to inform the jury that if it found that appellee was not guilty of the negligence charged with reference to the headlight and crossing signal, that it would be justified in finding that it was not guilty of operating the car at an excessive rate of speed, if it found that the obstructions of the view in approaching the crossing were not of such a character as to have prevented appellant, had he exercised ordinary care in looking, from seeing the car in time to have stopped and avoided the danger. The *Page 467
general rule in this regard, as stated in a recent decision of this court, applicable to both steam and electric railroads, in rural districts, is as follows: "Where a train and a traveler on the highway approach a crossing at the same time, it is not the duty of the railway company to stop its train; but it is the duty of the traveler, in obedience to the known custom of the country, to stop and not attempt to pass in front of the advancing train. The engineer may rely on the presumption that the traveler will stop at a place of safety; and therefore the law imposes no duty on him to slacken the speed of his train." Pittsburgh, etc., R.Co. v. Nichols, Admr. (1921),
Instruction No. 14 given on request of appellee is also challenged. To sustain appellant's contention with *Page 468 respect to this instruction, we would be compelled to hold 12. that the court may not say that a traveler approaching a railroad crossing in the nighttime, over which an interurban car was being operated, equipped with a lighted headlight, which could have been seen continuously by such traveler, in the exercise of ordinary care when approaching such crossing, while it passed over the last 1,000 feet in reaching the same, was guilty of contributory negligence, if he failed to see such car, or to give heed to what he saw, and, by reason of such failure, drove his automobile onto the track on which the car was being operated, or in such close proximity thereto, that it was struck thereby. This we cannot do, under the well-established rules, as we are unable to conceive of any circumstances which would excuse appellant's failure to see or to heed the approach of the car. But, if conceivable, there is no evidence of the existence of any such circumstance in the instant case. While it cannot be said that he should have looked for the car when it was 1,000 feet from the crossing, or when it was at any certain distance therefrom, it was his duty to look for it while it was at such a distance that he could have avoided colliding with the same, in the exercise of ordinary care, and his failure to see it at all, or seeing it, his failure to heed its approach, cannot be explained on any other ground than negligence. We say, in view of the facts on which this instruction is predicated, that if he did not see the car, or heed its approach, prior to the collision, he was guilty of negligence, under the circumstances stated, and if he did see it and gave it heed, prior to the collision, but not in time to avoid the same, in the exercise of ordinary care, he was guilty of negligence, under the circumstances stated. There was no error committed in giving said instruction.
Appellant also predicates error on the action of the *Page 469 court in giving instructions Nos. 6, 7, 11, 15 and 18, requested by appellee. We have carefully examined each of these instructions, and have reached the conclusion that the court did not err in giving any one of them. We find it unnecessary to prolong this opinion by a discussion of appellant's contention with reference thereto, as an application of what we have said in discussing other instructions given affords a sufficient explanation of the reasons on which our conclusion is based.
Judgment affirmed.
Remy, J., dissents.