63 N.Y. 522 | NY | 1876
Upon the first trial of this action, it was shown that the Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad Company had always kept a flagman at the crossing where the accident under consideration happened, but that he was absent at the time of the accident; and the court charged the jury that these facts might he considered by them upon the question of defendant’s negligence. Upon appeal to the General Term, this charge was held to have been erroneous, and a new trial was granted. (1 S. C. [T. & C.], 243.) Upon the new trial, the plaintiff, against the objection of the defendant, was permitted to prove the same facts upon the question of the
Judge Andbews, in his opinion upon the former appeal of this case, reiterated the doctrine that the law does not make it the duty of a railroad company to place a flagman at street crossings to warn travelers, but he did not hold that the evidence of the presence or absence of a flagman might not be proved in any case as bearing upon the negligence of a railroad company sued for damages. I believe it has been the common practice to receive this class of evidence in such cases as this, and there are many reported cases in this country and in England where it has been received, and no case has fallen under my observation where it has been held to be improper.
Where there has been a collision at a railroad crossing, with a traveler upon the highway, and the railroad company is sued for negligence in causing the collision, its negligence is made out generally by proving all the circumstances surrounding the transaction, and submitting them with proper instructions to* the jury. It may be proved that the collision took place in the night time, in a rain storm, that the train was running fast or slow, with or without head lights, that it was backing or going forward, that it was running in a city in a crowded thoroughfare, or in the country, that there were many or few tracks, that there were obstructions making it impossible to see the train before the crossing was reached. These circumstances are proved, not to impose upon the railroad company any duty which the law does not impose, or any duty to do any acts collateral to the running and management of its trains in a lawful manner upon its road, but as bearing upon
It must be conceded that a railroad company charged with negligence at a road crossing, may give evidence to show that they kept a flagman there to warn travelers ; in such case the plaintiff may controvert this evidence and show that no flagman was there. The judge may charge the jury that the presence of a flagman, if they find one was present, must be considered by them upon the question of the care with which defendant run and managed its trains. Can it properly be said that they may not consider the absence of a flagman, if they so find upon the same question ?
I am, therefore, of opinion that the evidence rejected ought to have been received, upon the question of defend
But there is another error for which the judgment should be reversed. Upon the trial the plaintiff offered to prove the ordinance of the city of Albany, which required a flagman to be stationed at every street crossing, and the evidence was excluded. It is not questioned that the ordinance was properly passed and promulgated. It was, therefore, in the nature of a law to be observed within the city by all railroad companies. If the defendant had owned the track upon which its train was running at the time of the accident, it has been decided that the evidence would have been competent. (Jetter v. N. Y. and H. R. R. Co., 2 Abb. Ct. of App. Dec., 458; Beisegel v. The N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 14 Abb. Pr. [N. S.], 29; Lane v. Atlantic Works, 111 Mass., 136.) The object of the ordinance was the security and protection of the travelers upon the streets. The defendant must be held to have known of its existence, and all persons within the city were bound to take notice of it as if it had been a law regularly enacted by the legislature. It either, in terms, applied to the defendant, although it was using a road owned by another company; or the defendant may have been guilty of some negligence in running its train upon the road when the owners thereof neglected the duty imposed upon it — to keep a flagman at the crossing. While using the road it was bound, so far as concerns the question of liability for negligence, by the same laws and ordinances which bound the owner. ( Webb v. Portland and K. R. R.
A violation or disregard of the ordinance, while not conclusive evidence of negligence, is some evidence upon the question to be submitted to the jury, with all the other evidence.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide event.
Rapallo, J., concurs; Church, Oh. J., and Folger, J., concur on last ground; Allen, J., did not vote; Miller, J., did not sit.
Judgment reversed.
59 N. Y.,468.