75 N.W. 250 | N.D. | 1898
Plaintiff has recovered a judgment for the r value of his wagon, with its load of coal, which it is undisputed, were destroyed by one of the defendant’s freight trains at a railroad crossing. In answering the first point made by counsel for the defendant, that the highway had not been legally established, it is only necessary to refer to a few facts in the case, and, in connection therewith, cite the previous decisions of this court. It is not denied that the crossing had been used by the public, as part of a public highway, for at least eight years, before the accident. One of the witnesses testified that he had used it for a period of 14 years. The defendant had placed there the usual planking, and the jury were justified in finding that it had erected there a sign warning travelers upon the highway that there was a railroad crossing at that place. So far as the duty of the defendant to the public was concerned, the crossing was as much a public crossing as though the highway had been laid out in strict accordance with law. Coulter v. Railway Co., 5 N. D. 568, 67 N. W. Rep. 1046. See, also, Bishop v. Railway Co., 4 N. D. 540, 62 N. W. Rep. 605.
It is urged that the property was placed in the position of peril which it was in at the time of the collision through the plaintiff’s own carelessness, and that, therefore, he cannot recover. He was drawing coal from his coal mine, a few miles west of Minot, in this state, to that city, and was compelled to cross the railroad track at this point in order to reach the market for his fuel. While driving over the track, the axle of one of the wheels broke; and, before he was able to remove the wagon from the place of danger, it was struck by one of defendant’s engines, and completely destroyed, it appears that the planks between the
Finding no error, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.