65 N.Y.S. 699 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
I am of opinion that the learned trial justice properly disposed of the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit. The evidence was insufficient to authorize the submission to the jury of the question of the defendant’s negligence or the absence of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate.
Before considering the evidence of the defendant’s negligence we should determine whether any offered by the plaintiff on that question was erroneously excluded, and if so, should give to it the effect it should have had if it had been admitted. The place where the deceased attempted to cross the tracks of the defendant’s road was not a regular crossing, and the plaintiff’s counsel sought to show that people living on the westerly side of the tracks and having occasion to cross at Elm street had been accustomed, when a freight train was obstructing Elm street, to cross the tracks at the end of the train. I think such evidence was proper as bearing on the question of the degree of care which should be exercised by the defendant knowing and acquiescing in such custom. The questions in the foregoing statement of facts were evidently asked with a purpose of showing such custom. They were proper in form, and I think the witness should have been permitted to answer them, except the one ‘c For some years before the accident were the public in coming down, that is, coming east on Elm street, accustomed to going around the end of a freight train that blocked the crossing % ” which may be objectionable. We should, therefore, regard the custom sought to be shown as proven.
The remaining fact is the speed of the train which, although the accuracy of the inexperienced witness may be doubted, we must assume to have been ten miles an hour. Our attention has been called to a class of cases holding that the running of a train at a high rate of speed through a crowded or thickly populated locality in a city or village is evidence of negligence to be submitted to a jury. But this case is not within that rule. Here the train was running at the low rate of ten miles an hour, and in the absence of evidence that timely warning of its approach was not given, the jury would not have been authorized in finding that that rate of speed, under the circumstances, was negligence.
I am also of the opinion that the complaint was property dismissed for want of evidence that the plaintiff’s intestate was free from contributory negligence. She was beyond question sui juris, and although she might not be held to the same degree of care as an adult, yet she was bound to exercise such care and caution as might be reasonably expected of a person of lier years, intelligence and experience, and the burden was upon the plaintiff to show the exercise of such care. (Reynolds v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 58 N. Y. 250 ; Tucker v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 124 id. 308 ; Thompson v. B. R. Co., 145 id. 196.)
The evidence fails to'show the exercise of any care by the deceased for her protection, and is convincing of her negligence. She was a bright, intelligent girl over twelve years of age; had for seven or eight years been accustomed to crossing the tracks of the defendant’s road in going to and returning from school and had frequently crossed in doing errands for her grandmother. The freight train on the siding obstructing Elm street was not unusual, and the passenger train was one that had for several years been coming in
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, Parker, P. J., and Kellogg, J., in the result.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.