72 P. 940 | Utah | 1903
This is an action for the recovery . of damages resulting from the alleged negligence of the defendant. The answer, after admitting that it was and is a corporation, denied each and every other allegation of the complaint. It appears from the evidence that the plain tiff, while driving his team, attached to a mowing machine, on the public highway, across the defendant’s railroad, at what was known as the “Knowles Crossing,” was struck by a moving train of the defendant, thereby receiving a. personal injury, his team killed, and the mowing machine broken up. A judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff.
1. ' The first assignment of error is as to the admission, over the objection of the defendant, of the statements of several witnesses that the hell on the train
2. At the close‘of the plaintiff’s evidence in chief the defendant moved for a nonsuit, which was denied, and the defendant excepted. The ground of the motion was, in substance, that the evidence in chief disclosed gross contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. Contributory negligence of the plaintiff was
3. The second instruction given to the jury is as follows: “The court instructs you that on the 13th day
Among other instructions, the following were given to the jury: “Negligence of the defendant in the omission to sound its whistle or ring its bell, or in running at an unusual or unlawful rate of speed, if you find such was the case, did not relieve the plaintiff from the exercise of care on his own part to avoid the accident complained of. It was his duty, on approaching the railroad track, to use his senses of sight and hearing to ascertain whether or not a train was approaching upon the railroad track from either direction; and if there were any objects that intercepted his vision, and prevented him from seeing the approaching train in the direction from which it came, then the law imposes upon him greater care to discover whether or not a train was
This court held in State v. McCoy, 15 Utah 136,
4. The refusal to give certain instructions requested by the defendant is assigned as error. As the instructions given correctly stated the law
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.