131 A. 875 | N.J. | 1926
Ralph Hendrickson, the plaintiff in one of these suits, was driving a truck for the B.F. Fowler Company, the plaintiff in the other suit, and was engaged in hauling his employer's merchandise from a freight car of the defendant railroad company, which the latter had placed upon its siding east of and adjacent to its main tracks, and hard by its Euclid avenue (public highway) crossing in the borough of Haddonfield, at which the railroad company had installed safety gates.
The railroad company had so arranged its premises that access to this freight car was had from that part of the crossing inside the safety gates and along a driveway on the railroad premises extending along the siding.
On the first trip, proceeding in a westerly direction, Hendrickson entered the crossing from Euclid avenue, stopped and made a backing turn down the railroad driveway to the freight car. On the second trip he likewise proceeded in a westerly direction down the avenue and drove without warning through the open and stationary gates (at the edge of the right of way) and upon such public highway crossing, intending to back into the driveway, and then suddenly saw, close upon him, a train coming very fast on the northbound track. He jumped and was injured and the truck was demolished. The suits were tried together at the Camden Circuit, and the defendant appeals from the judgments entered upon the verdicts for the plaintiffs. *312
The complaints, among other things, count on negligence in letting the plaintiff, Hendrickson, on the tracks from the public highway through open and stationary gates without warning.
The grounds of appeal argued present only the narrow question hereafter to be stated. It is not disputed that the defendant railroad company, having assumed to install safety gates designed to protect the traveling public at this crossing, owed to travelers upon the public highway the duty of exercising ordinary care in the management of such gates. Passarello v. WestJersey and Seashore Railroad Co.,
The sole contention on this appeal is that the plaintiff, Hendrickson, was using the crossing in question for the purpose of conveniently turning or backing his truck, and not for the purpose of crossing the railroad from one side to the other, and, hence, was not a traveler upon the highway, nor such a traveler as was entitled to assume that the way was safe because the safety gates were open and stationary.
We think that contention is unsound.
Of course, this is not the case of a trespasser, or of one who enters upon a crossing from a railroad company's right of way, as in James v. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co.,
Both judgments will be affirmed, with costs.
For affirmance — THE CHANCELLOR, CHIEF JUSTICE, TRENCHARD, PARKER, KALISCH, BLACK, KATZENBACH, CAMPBELL, LLOYD, WHITE, VAN BUSKIRK, McGLENNON, KAYS, HETFIELD, JJ. 14.
For reversal — None. *314