60 P. 871 | Ariz. | 1900
The only error assigned by appellant in this case is that the verdict of the jury was not sustained by the evidence. The appellee, as the administratrix of the estate of George H. Dean, deceased, brought suit against the appellant to recover damages for injuries resulting in the death of said George H. Dean, deceased,'—caused, as alleged by her in her complaint, through the negligence of the railroad company. The suit was brought by the plaintiff, under the statute, in behalf of herself, as the widow of said Dean, deceased, and as well in behalf of two children, the issue of the marriage between her and said deceased. It appears that on the morning of the 14th of May, 1898, George H. Dean, in company with one Horace Bliss and one Bert Toney, was driving into Tempe on the highway between the villages of Mesa and Tempe, riding in a farm wagon drawn by two horses. Bliss was the driver of the conveyance. While crossing the railway track near Tempe the wagon was run into by appellant’s train and Dean and Tone.y killed and Bliss seriously injured. The railroad crossing where the accident occurred was within the limits of the village of Tempe. It appears that the Hay
Bliss testified that on reaching the bridge he almost stopped his horses and looked and listened- for the train, but neither saw nor heard it; that- from this point until he reached the track the latter was obscured, in the direction from which the train came, by the row of cottonwood trees; that from the. bridge towards the track there was first a sharp descent and then an equally sharp ascent to the track; that while in the hollow between the bridge and the track he again stopped and looked and listened for the tráin, and again neither heard nor saw it; that he then started across, and just as he was going on to the track, for the first time, he saw the approaching train, when it was too late to do anything but jump. John Knight, a witness for plaintiff, testified that at the time of the accident he was standing on the outside of his store building in Tempe, talking to a Mr. Woodmansee, and saw the train pass his place immediately before it reached the crossing where Dean was killed, which was in sight, and about three hundred feet distant; that about three hundred yards from the crossing the train gave one short whistle; that it was then running at about the rate of twenty or twenty-five miles an hour; that the bell was not ringing when it passed the point where he stood. This witness corroborated Bliss as to the presence along the track of the row of cottonwood trees, and that at the time of the accident the view from the bridge to the track in the direction from whence the train came on
Upon the question as to whether or not the occupants of the wagon by their own negligence contributed to the accident the burden of proof was upon the appellant. The case for the appellant upon this question rested upon the. admissions of the witness Bliss, and his conduct as testified to by certain eye-witnesses, from which the inference might be drawn that he had seen the train, or heard it, but undertook to cross the track in advance of its reaching the crossing. The admissions of Bliss could not bind the plaintiff in the action, and only went to his credit as a witness. It was purely within the province of the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses, and it is not a question for this court to determine upon the appeal. We cannot say, as a matter of law, that the jury were wrong in believing .Bliss, and in discarding the testimony of the impeaching witnesses. In our judgment, there is enough testimony in the record to support the verdict, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Davis, J., and Doan, J., concur.