59 N.Y. 468 | NY | 1875
The judge, on the trial, allowed the plaintiff to testify that, at the crossing where the injury happened, it had been the custom of the railroad company to keep a flagman, and that at the time of the injury in question there was no flagman there. The plaintiff crossed the railroad at this point frequently, and had seen the flagman at his post. The proof as to the flagman was objected to by the defendant, but it was admitted by the judge, as a circumstance bearing upon the plaintiff's negligence, and in his charge he stated to the jury that the evidence as to the flagman was only pertinent upon the point whether the plaintiff paid that attention that he should have paid in approaching the crossing. Upon the first trial of the case the same evidence was admitted as bearing upon the negligence of the defendant. The General Term reversed the judgment entered upon the verdict then obtained, on the ground that, under the circumstances of the case and in view of the relation in which the defendant stood to the Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad Company, whose track it was using at the time of the accident, the absence of the flagman from his customary place was not attributable to any negligence on the part of the defendant, and was not a circumstance which could legitimately be considered in determining its liability. The question now arises whether this evidence is admissible as tending to support the issue, which the plaintiff was bound to maintain, that he was free from fault and that there was no negligence on his part contributing to the injury. The injury for which the plaintiff brings his action must have been caused solely by the negligence of the defendant, or he cannot recover. If the plaintiff's negligence concurred with that of the defendant, and was an element in producing the injury, he is remediless. He cannot cast upon another the responsibility of an event, which, except for his own co-operating negligence, would *471
not have happened. It does not help him, although the greater blame may attach to the defendant. The law does not undertake, when both parties have been negligent, to measure the degree of the negligence of each, nor will it allow a recovery by the party least in fault against the other. The defendant, in running its train, and the plaintiff, in using the highway, were each engaged in the exercise of a lawful right. They had the common right of passage over it, and each was bound to use reasonable and ordinary care to avoid a collision. Ordinary care is defined to be that degree of care which a prudent person would be likely to exercise under given circumstances, but the definition is certainly very vague, and, in an action for damages for a personal injury, alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of another, it often happens that the line which separates actionable negligence and conduct consistent with ordinary care, is, in a given case, so indistinct, and the question is involved in so many complexities from the varieties of facts to be considered and the difficulty in clearly comprehending the situation of the parties, that a conclusion is reached only with great doubt and hesitation, and the fact is usually to be found by the jury, under such general instructions as to the law as the court may be able to give. But, in respect to a person traveling in a highway, which is crossed by a railway, it has been settled, by a series of adjudications in this State, that he is bound, on approaching the crossing, to look and listen, if by so doing he can discover the proximity of a moving train, and that the omission to do so is an omission of ordinary care, which will prevent his recovering for an injury which might have been avoided if he had used his faculties of sight and hearing. (Gorton v. The Erie Railway Co.,
The law does not make it the duty of a railroad company to place a flagman at street crossings to warn travelers. (Beisiegel's Case,
The evidence as to the flagman was, I think, irrelevant for the purpose for which it was received, and for the error in admitting it the judgment should be reversed.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.