213 Wis. 670 | Wis. | 1934
Defendant appealed in these actions from judgments recovered against it for damages for the deaths of Oscar Peterson and Kenneth Pleaney, who were instantly killed in a collision between a Ford coupe in which they were riding and a locomotive, drawing one of defendant’s passenger trains, on March 9, 1932, at about 11 o’clock a. m. The collision occurred at the right-angled grade crossing of an east-and-west graveled public highway by a railway track of the defendant, in a farming region. The automobile was being driven eastward by Heaney, who was a high school graduate, twenty-one years of age, and who resided about three miles from that crossing. Peterson, who was a passenger in the automobile, was forty-four years of age, an uncle of Heaney, and resided some distance from that intersection, but had crossed it on a couple of occasions. In a
In relation to the alleged negligence on its part, defendant contends that there was not sufficient evidence to go to the jury upon the questions of the failure to ring the locomotive bell continuously from a point eighty rods from the crossing and until it was reached, and the failure to blow the whistle eighty rods from such crossing; and furthermore, that such negligence if proven did not constitute a proximate cause of the injuries. In determining whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain the jury’s findings, it must be borne in mind that—
“If the evidence is conflicting, or if the inferences to be drawn from the credible evidence are doubtful and uncertain, and there is any credible evidence which under any reasonable view will support or admit of an inference either for or against the claim or contention of any party, then the rule that the proper inference to be drawn therefrom is a question for the jury should be firmly adhered to, and the court should not assume to answer such question either upon*673 a motion for nonsuit or direction of verdict, or by substituting another answer after the verdict is returned.” Trautmann v. Charles Schefft & Sons Co. 201 Wis. 113, 115, 116, 228 N. W. 741.
It is true that there is some evidence on the part of the train crew and several passengers that the whistle and bell were duly sounded; and Roy Wilson, who was working between his house and barn about eighty rods to the west and north of the crossing, testified that he heard the whistle blown at about the whistling post, which was 1,358 feet south of the crossing, and then one or two short blasts and a regular crossing whistle, and~.also that he heard the bell ring, just before and after the crash, when the train was at the crossing.
However, plaintiffs relied on the testimony of three men who were clearing brush about seventy-five feet east of the track, and opposite a stump pile which was near the track and 500 feet north of the whistling post. Between them and the track there were some trees which somewhat interfered with their view of a train coming from the south, until up to 750 feet south of the crossing, but there was no such interference while a train was going over those 750 feet. Those men were intent upon the arrival of the train as a signal for suspending work for their midday meal. Their testimony was to the effect that they could and did see the train as it moved all of the way from the whistling post to the crossing; that they could see and hear that the bell was not rung at all between that post and the crossing, but that they saw and heard it rung when the train was stopped and backed up, after the collision. In relation to the whistle they testified that they could hear and see that it was neither blown at the whistling post nor until the engine was from 120 to 180 feet north of the stump pile, which would be at about 600 feet north of the whistling post or 750 feet south of the crossing. Between that point and until the engine was over the crossing they heard four
It was under those circumstances and conditions that Heaney and Peterson approached the track from the west, but there is no testimony as to how they proceeded or what tliey did after passing Wilson’s house. In this class of cases the burden of proof, that a traveler crossing the track was guilty of more than a slight want of ordinary care contributing to his injury, is, as is expressly declared in
Heaney’s situation was rather like that of the driver in Shaver v. Davis, 175 Wis. 592, 185 N. W. 227, than that of the driver in Paine v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., supra, or in any of the other cases cited above. In the case at bar, as in the Shaver Case, there is evidence that there was a blustering high wind, at times a heavy drifting snowstorm, an unfamiliar railway crossing which was traveled but little at the time, and a rough road with snow partly covering it and the tracks. In addition, Pleaney was also confronted with icy ruts concealed by some snow, and a downward slope with a more marked dip as he came closer to the track.
As to Peterson’s conduct, there is, particularly in view of the recent decision in Tomberlin v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 208 Wis. 30, 238 N. W. 287, 242 N. W. 677, 243 N. W. 208, and Paine v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. 208 Wis. 423, 243 N. W. 205, even less basis for holding that he was guilty as a matter of law of more than a slight want of ordinary care. In Tomberlin v. Chicago, St. P., M. &. O. R. Co., supra, we said:
“A passenger in the automobile is not held to such a-strict degree of care, and whether his failure to look amounts to contributory negligence is, generally, a jury question.”
That rule was followed in Paine v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., supra, and recognized in Crane v. Weber, 211 Wis. 294, 247 N. W. 882. It is in accord with the recent decision in. Miller v. Union Pac. R. Co. 290 U. S. 227, 54 Sup. Ct. 172 (decided December 4, 1933). Our conclusion, that the passenger, in the Crane Case, under his own and undisputed testimony, was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, was not in disregard of the rule that that issue is generally a jury question. In that case the collision occurred on a clear day at a busy crossing of a. level city street by several railway tracks, including some for rapid transportation; and the passenger was well aware of those conditions at that crossing. He testified that he saw and heard the rapidly approaching train forty feet to the right of -that crossing, when the automobile,- in which he was sitting to the right of the driver, was thirty feet from, the track- and proceeding at but twelve miles per hour; that it was ap
Defendant also contends that neither the failure to sound the. whistle before the engine was 660 feet from the crossing nor the failure to sound the bell continuously from a point eighty rods from the crossing, could constitute a proximate cause of the collision. Those contentions are based on the proposition, on the one hand, that the men, who were working in the open to the south and east of the crossing, and Wilson, who was eighty rods to the west and north of it, testified that they were able to hear those sounds and see the train at such distances as would have been sufficient to enable Heaney to stop the automobile in time to avoid the collision, if he had likewise heard or seen the train approaching at such distances from the crossing; and, on the other
As the legislature in enacting sec. 192.29 (4), Stats., has expressly required the engine bell on a locomotive or train approaching a crossing of the kind involved herein to be rung continuously from eighty rods before reaching such crossing until it is reached, and such ringing does somewhat increase the volume of sound that constitutes warning of a train’s approach, it would be unjustifiable to conclude that the complete omission to comply with that statutory requirement could not be a proximate cause of the collision. That is particularly true because under the circumstances in this case, timely and continuing warning was of the utmost importance. What would have been ample time and distance within which to stop an automobile on a clear, level, gravel-surfaced road may well have been entirely inadequate on a rutty, icy, snow-covered road. Coming unexpectedly to a down grade on a road of the latter type, in a blustering storm, with snow flurries obstructing his vision and a heavy wind affecting the movement of the light coupe, the operation and control thereof may well have required most of Heaney’s attention, thought, and action. If the jury found that greater concentration was required in operating and controlling the automobile on the unfamiliar, roug’h, rutty, icy, snow-covered, downward-sloping road, and that be
By the Court. — Judgments affirmed.