61 F. 591 | D.R.I. | 1894
This is a motion for a new trial of an action at law, in which a verdict has been rendered for tbe plaintiff. The action is to recover damages for the negligence of the servants of the defendant, whereby the plaintiff was struck by an engine near Narragansett Pier, and injured. The testimony for the plaintiff is that he was driving a spirited horse on the road which crosses the railway; that at a point about five hundred feet from the crossing the road makes a turn nearly at right angles, and thence leads westward to the crossing; that the train approached from the north; that on the north side of the road are trees, not on the land of the defendant, which obstruct the view of a train approaching from the north,- -the line of trees being, not continuous, but broken only by short Intervals, and extending to a point within about 40 feet from the crossing; that he made the turn in the road, and drove westward, towards the track; that he checked the speed of Ms horse, and listened, after making the turn, and heard no sound of a train; that he looked for a train, as opportunity offered, through the intervals between the clumps of trees, and saw no train; that he looked towards the crossing, and that the flagman who is usually there when the trains are about to pass was absent; that the -westward end of the lines of trees is so near the track that there would be danger in stopping the horse at that point to look up the track, from the fact that, ata point so near a train, it would be difficult to turn the horse without overturning the carriage; and that he drove forward, and came in collision with the