A verdict was rendered against defendant for damages on account of personal injuries sustained by plaintiff, and defendant appealed from an order denying its alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a now trial.
Seventh street, one of the principal thoroughfares of the village of Perham, is crossed at a right angle by the railway of defendant. Plaintiff, a young man in his twenty-second year at the time of the accident, was employed in a building on the southerly side of the railway, but resided upon the northerly side thereof. At the noon hour he left his place of employment and proceeded northward along the westerly side of Seventh street on his way to dinner. Before he reached the railway tracks a freight train, coming from the west, pulled across Seventh street and stopped, thereby blocking the crossing. Gates were provided to protect the crossing while trains were passing through, and these gates were closed. After waiting for four or five minutes, he passed through the gates and started to climb across the train between the cars. While he was doing so the train backed up and crushed his foot so that it was necessary to amputate the front portion of it. Ho brought this action to recover damages.
It is clear that plaintiff, in attempting to climb between the cars at the time and in the manner that he did, was guilty of contributory negligence, and this is conceded. He bases his claim to recover solely upon the contention that the engineer was guilty of what is usually termed wilful and wanton negligence. One who knows that another
The train consisted of 51 cars and the conductor and brakemen were in the caboose at the rear eating their lunch. The conductor had directed the engineer to run through Perham without stopping, and to sidetrack at a station 11 miles further on, to permit a passenger train to pass. As they approached Perham the conductor discovered a hot-box upon one of the cars, and, in order to fix it, “pulled the air” and stopped the train. Having stopped, it was necessary to side- ■ track for the passenger which was following them. The engine had run some distance beyond the switch and it was necessary to back up. The engineer gave three short blasts of the whistle, the usual signal to back up, and then looked back toward the rear for the answering signal, in case it should be given from the southerly side of the train. The fireman -watched for it from the other or northerly side. Under the operating rules, the engineer could not back the train until he had received this signal. The rear brakeman alighted from the caboose on the southerly side, and the conductor and head brakeman on the northerly side. The conductor gave the answering signal to back up, which was reported to the engineer by the fireman. The engineer turned to his levers, reversed the engine, and began the backward niovement. He testified that he did not see the plaintiff and did not know that he was attempting to pass between the cars..
Plaintiff and several other persons were waiting for the train to move off the crossing. Plaintiff went up to the train, looked west
Common experience teaches that men seldom, knowingly and wantonly, do an act likely to inflict injury upon another. The engineer had no reason to anticipate that plaintiff would take the risk of attempting to pass through a train upon the main track with the gates guarding the crossing closed; and was not required to watch for such attempts. In order to establish the charge that he backed the train in wilful and reckless disregard of the danger to plaintiff, it must be shown with reasonable certainty that he had knowledge of plaintiff’s perilous situation. The evidence is not sufficient to sustain a finding that the engineer had such knowledge, and the order appealed from is reversed and judgment directed for defendant.