31 N.Y.S. 1033 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
This action was brought by the plaintiff, as administratrix, to recover damages sustained by the next of kin by the death of her husband, Frederick Lortz. Lortz was killed while attempting to cross the defendant’s track, in the village of Batavia, by coming in collision with one of the defendant’s locomotives. We assume, in disposing of this appeal, that the juiy was justified in finding that the defendant’s negligence caused the death of the deceased. Whether the deceased was shown to be free from negligence contributing to his death is the serious question in the case. The defendant’s road runs in an easterly and westerly direction through
We think that no other conclusion is deducible from the evidence than that the deceased was standing, as described, near the south track, and waited for the west-bound train to pass Cedar street, and then either attempted to cross the track without looking in either direction, or, if he looked to the west, he saw the smoke upon the track, and, without waiting for it to pass away, attempted to cross, without being able to see, because of the smoke, whether the train was approaching. We do not think the jury was justified, under the evidence, in coming to any other conclusion; and such being the case, under the well-settled law of our state, he must be held to have been guilty of such contributory negligence as to prevent the plaintiff from recovering.
The facts in Heaney v. Railroad Co., 112 N. Y. 125, 10 N. E. 422, are very similar to the facts of this case. The deceased in that case attempted to cross the defendant’s railroad tracks in the city of Brooklyn about 6 o’clock in the morning. The weather was cloudy and drizzly. The train had just passed on the track nearest to the deceased as he attempted to cross, and the smoke from the engine settled down upon the road sufficient to temporarily obscure objects in the line of his vision. He "was about 66 years of age, and his hearing was somewhat impaired. He was killed by a passing train, the approach of which was obscured by smoke upon the track. It was held that it was the unquestioned duty of the deceased to await the disappearance of the smoke before he attempted
“If It was a body [referring to the smoke] perceivable, as contrasted with other objects, it was to a greater or lesser extent an obstruction or embarrassment to the vision; and to say that the deceased may not have known that the smoke was an obstruction involves the proposition that he may not have been conscious of the condition of the atmosphere distinguishable from its other or usual conditions, which is so unreasonable that habit disables us from understanding it.”
The doctrine of this case we do not understand to have been, at all disturbed by the later cases of McNamara v. Railroad Co. (Sup.) 19 N. Y. Supp. 497, and Shiels v. Wortmann, 126 N. Y. 650, 27 N. E. 379. The decision in the latter case was placed upon the ground that the jury may have found from the evidence that it was a curve in the line of the road that prevented the deceased from seeing the approaching locomotive, and not the presence of smoke. The accident to Lortz occurred from 15 to 30 minutes before sunset. If the smoke upon the track was as dense as the plaintiff’s evidence tends to show it to have been, it is very improbable that the deceased would have failed to see it had he looked in that direction. The plaintiff failed to show that the deceased was free from negligence contributing to his death, and hence failed to make a case entitling her to recover. The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event. All concur.