49 Minn. 245 | Minn. | 1892
In this action defendant corporation was charged with having so carelessly and negligently run and operated one of its trains when crossing a public highway as to have brought it in collision with plaintiff’s intestate, thereby killing him instantly. The court below ordered and the jury returned a verdict for defendant upon all of the testimony, and plaintiff appeals from an order denying her motion for a new trial. The crossing, which seems to have been an exceedingly dangerous one, known as “King’s Crossing,” was about midway between the stations of Darwin and Dassel, some six miles apart, on defendant’s line of road. The highway was the main traveled road between these places, and along the entire distance ran nearly parallel with the railway, crossing it at the scene of the accident. The deceased had resided for several years some eight miles from this crossing, about five miles from defendant’s railway at the nearest point, and it was not made to appear that he knew anything of the specially dangerous character of the place, except as knowledge might be imputed to him from the fact that he had previously driven over the road, twice, according to the testimony of his widow, the plaintiff.
On this particular day he was driving easterly from Darwin to Das-sel, having a .pair of horses attached to an unloaded lumber wagon. The train, also going easterly, was a regular passenger, upon time, running thirty miles an hour, and due at the crossing about three o’clock p. m. Westerly of the crossing was a deep cut, over a thousand feet long, and, at places, more than twenty-five feet in depth. Beside it, on top of the bank and some forty feet from its edge, was the wagon road, and at various places between the road and the cut were piles of earth and bushes or small trees, which naturally obscured the vision of travelers upon the highway, and rendered it more difficult for them to observe a train approaching from the west. When within less than three hundred feet of the crossing, the wagon road entered upon a! slight depression in the surface of the ground, and thence, through a small ravine, down hill, and, bear
The limited opportunity for observing the coming of a train can best be judged by the testimony of the engineer, who, at his post upon the south or right-hand side of the cab, was looking out for the crossing. He saw the horses first, the moment they cáme in sight, and, an instant after, the wagon, in which Mr. Hendrickson was seated. In his opinion, the locomotive was not over one hundred and twenty feet from the crossing when the team emerged in view at a point on the wagon road not to exceed fifty feet from the rails.
From this testimony it is evident that Mr. Hendrickson, fully aware of the proximity of a railway crossing, as we must presume him to have been, could not have seen, without getting down from his wagon, and did not see, the locomotive before the moment his horses were discovered by the engineer, as before stated, and who instantly realized that they were uncomfortably close to the track over which the train must pass. By reason of the deep cut, the obstructions to the vision before mentioned, the conformation of the ground over which the wagon road descended to within a few feet of the railway, and the angle of the crossing itself, the risk and hazard to wayfarers upon the road were largely augmented.
These facts and circumstances were peculiarly within the knowledge of defendant company, and the engineer in charge of the locomotive admitted, when testifying, that he knew it to be a dangerous crossing.
To sum up the situation, this junction of ways was of such a nature that a person driving on the public road came down a hill in a depression or ravine almost parallel with the track, to a point some fifty feet distant, before he could discover a train coming in his rear, and it would then be but about one hundred and twenty feet away. Bunning at the rate of the one in question, it would cover that distance (unless cheeked by the brakes) within three seconds. The imperative necessity for ample cautionary signals by
There was a sharp conflict of testimony as to whether the whistle was sounded at the caution post eighty rods west of the crossing, or whether the bell was then rung, or rung at all until a collision with the wagon seemed imminent. The engineer and fireman, and other persons who were on the train, asserted with great positiveness that the whistle was sounded at the post, and that thereafter the bell was rung as the train approached the crossing. Other persons who resided and were at work in the immediate vicinity, some of whom had reason to observe the approach of the train and to notice the signals, if they had been given, were equally as positive that there was no whistle sounded and no bell rung until the engineer discovered the horses within fifty feet of the track.
On this conflicting testimony it stands conceded that the jurors would have been justified in concluding that no cautionary signal was given, and that the defendant’s servants were negligent in this respect when driving their ponderous machinery along the track towards the crossing, a place where every traveler upon the public road is expected to listen for, and therefore has a right to rely to some extent upon, the sounding of a warning or cautionary signal, —a signal to be regulated by and commensurate with the necessities of the locality, the risk and hazard at the intersection. More care and vigilance are required at a crossing of extremely dangerous character, as this was, by all parties, train men and travelers on the highway, than at a place where there are no obstructions to interfere with sight and hearing, the difference between the parties being that the train men are presumed to know all about the peculiarities of the intersection, while the travelers on the highway are not presumed to have the same knowledge. That they are acquainted with the crossing may be shown, of course.
As there was testimony which would have justified the finding that defendant was negligent, the real question resolves itself into an inquiry whether the proofs conclusively established defendant’s
We are of the opinion that a case was made which ought to have-been submitted to the jury.
Where a railway and a public road intersect, the rights of the traveler and of the railway company are regarded as equal, but, of course, the traveler must yield the right of way to a train .drawing near. In other words, if a traveler on a public road, having had an opportunity to learn in any manner of the approach of the railway train, sustains injuries from a collision while attempting to cross the rails when the train is crossing the highway, he has no cause of action. A railway company must be exonerated when a collision occurs at an intersection with a public road, if it has used such reasonable care to avoid the collision as ordinary prudence would suggest. If it has, and a collision ensue, the fault must be with the traveler on the highway, consisting in his failure to exercise ordinary care. In such cases it has been well said that if,
A plaintiff administrator is not required in all cases of this character to prove affirmatively that his intestate looked or listened. It may be inferred, in view of the circumstances, that the deceased, governed by the instinct of self-preservation, did what a prudent man ordinarily would do to save his life. See Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Weber, 76 Pa. St. 157. It was demonstrated that Hendrickson was in a position or situation extremely perilous to him, and which he had not been cautioned to avoid, if we are to believe plaintiff’s witnesses, before he had reached a point in the public road where the train was visible, or when looking for it would have availed. This situation or position became dangerous, not by the simple act of Mr. Hendrickson in driving there, but through the neglect of defendant’s servants to give the warning signals required by law, Pen. Code, § 343, in season to prevent his near approach, and it was made still more perilous by the short, sharp danger whistles made necessary by reason of the neglect before mentioned, blown in such close proximity to the horses as to frighten and cause them to plunge forward upon the tracks directly in front of the destructive force. As was said in Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Ogier, 35 Pa. St. 60: “If there was no notice by blowing the whistle, a thing required to be done before reaching the point, and usually done, a traveler accustomed to expect this would not only not be so likely to look out for danger, or be in such preparedness to avoid it, as he otherwise might have been, and this without any culpable negligence on his part; for, if
Assuming, then, as we must, for the jury might have so determined, that no cautionary or warning signals were given, it must be held that if, by reason of this omission or neglect on the part of defendant’s servants, Mr. Hendrickson was led to be less vigilant when drawing near to the railway, his view along the tracks being obscured until he reached a place or situation in which his life was jeopardized and finally lost, his want of vigilance cannot be pronounced culpable, or concurring, negligence, as a matter of law. It is not an absolute answer to the claim for redress made by his legal representative that, notwithstanding the alleged omission of cautionary signals by the persons in charge of the locomotive, he might, by the exercise of greater vigilance, have discovered the approaching train, if he had foreseen a violation of the statute, instead of relying, perhaps, on its observance. Ernst v. Hudson River R. Co., 35 N. Y. 9.
In respondent’s brief, reference has been frequently made to the excellent opportunity there was for observing the line of railway as a person on the public road journeyed easterly from Darwin towards King’s crossing. When so journeying, and with a crossing of the track to be made, it would be the duty of the traveler to be watchful, and at all times to exercise ordinary care; but the fact that for two or three miles along the road, and before reaching the point where the view was obstructed, Mr. Hendrickson might have seen the train, had he looked to the rear some distance, was, at most, a simple circumstance to be considered by the jury when considering the claim that he ought to have seen the train in ample time to avoid the collision. While the view for some two or three miles west of the cut was not interfered with, it was greatly obstructed for a distance of more than a thousand feet, just at the point where the opportunities for observation were most needed, and are ordinarily regarded and made useful. Of course, if the train was within range of a traveler’s vision, as he looked over or between the piles of earth,
Nearly all of plaintiff’s witnesses, residents of that immediate locality, testified that, although no signals were sounded for the crossing, they heard the train coming from the time it left Darwin station, some three miles west; and from this it is maintained by respondent that had the deceased listened, as was his duty, when he approached the crossing, he, too, would have heard it coming, and would have been warned in ample time to prevent his driving so near the rails. The fact that the swift coming of the train was clearly manifested to the witnesses by the noise ic made when running conclusively established, it is argued, that the deceased failed to listen, or, listening, neglected to pay attention to the obvious warning of imminent danger. But in this contention respondent’s counsel overlooked two conditions, both present, which might have a bearing upon the matter: First, that Mr. Hendrickson was in an •empty lumber wagon, which must have made more or less noise as it was driven along; and, second, and of more moment, probably, that all of these witnesses were well acquainted with the movements of this particular train, knew when it might be expected at Darwin -station, as well as at the crossing, while some of them were paying special attention to its coming on that occasion. A stranger to the neighborhood and to the movements of' this train would not be expected to know that a train was approaching King’s crossing from the west simply because it whistled and blew off steam at Darwin, or because its approach was -apparent to those who knew all about its running time and movements.
Order reversed.