150 F. 325 | 1st Cir. | 1907
The defendant in error, hereinafter called the plaintiff, sued the plaintiff in error, hereinafter called the defendant, for damages caused by a collision with the defendant’s street railway car. The plaintiff had driven his buggy around a house situated in the town of Milford. The house stood upon a street through which ran the defendant’s single track, 33 feet distant from the front of the house, and on that side of the street. As the plaintiff passed in front of the house, he looked first to the left across a vacant field, and then to the right, where his view was interrupted by a shop close to the roadside. From the front line of the house he could see but 60 feet up the track to the westward. From a point 13 feet in advance, and therefore 20 feet from the track, he could look past the shop 1,200 feet in the same direction. He saw and heard no car. tie continued to walk his horse toward the track, and as he crossed it the front wheel of his buggy was struck with considerable violence by a car coming from, the westward. There was evidence that the motorman did not sound his gong, and that the car was running 16 miles an hour, a rate which the jury might have found to be excessive. The defendant asked the judge to direct a verdict in its favor.' This- the judge refused to do, and the defendant duly excepted. The jury found fot the plaintiff, and the defendant sued out his writ of error to this court. No question is here made of the defendant’s negligence.
Had the plaintiff looked up the track only at the exact moment of passing the front line of the house, whence he could have seen but 60 feet of track, his act would have been useless, inasmuch as a car going at a reasonable rate of speed would cover more than 60 feet, while he walked his horse 30 or 40. Had he, on the other hand, looked when 20 feet distant from the track, or at any time thereafter, his view would have taken in so much of the track that he must have seen the car, however fast it was approaching. But at some intermediate point the track must have been visible for a distance which would not be covered during the time in question by a car running at a reasonable speed, but which might have been covered by a car running 16 miles an hour. The jury may have found that this was the point from which the plaintiff looked up the track. It may have found also that the gong was not sounded, and that the plaintiff manifested his due care by listening for it.
We have here to deal, not with the responsibility of a steam railroad to its employés, which in the absence of statutory regulation is matter of general law (Gardner v. Michigan Central R. R., 150 U. S. 349, 358, 14 Sup. Ct. 140, 37 L. Ed. 1107); but with the use of highways, concerning which local decisions are persuasive (Detroit v. Osborne, 135 U. S. 493, 498, 10 Sup. Ct. 1012, 34 L. Ed. 260). We have examined many cases decided by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts which determine in differing circumstances the care required of a traveler crossing a street railway, and we are satisfied that in the case at bar the question of the plaintiff’s negligence was for the jury. Robbins v. Springfield Street Railway, 165 Mass. 30, 42 N. E. 334; Lahti v. Fitchburg Street Railway, 172 Mass. 147, 51 N. E. 524; Evenson v. Lexington Street Railway, 187 Mass. 77, 72 N. E. 355; Shea v. Lexington Street Railway, 188 Mass. 425, 74 N. E. 931; Orth v. Boston Elevated Railway, 188 Mass. 427, 74 N. E. 673; and particularly
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed, and the defendant in error recovers costs in this court.