208 P. 903 | Mont. | 1922
prepared the opinion for the Court.
At about 3 P. M. on February 11, 1919, the plaintiff, while driving a Grant five-passenger automobile, was struck on a public crossing on a continuation of East Mercury Street, half a mile east of the city limits of the city of Butte, by an engine being operated on the railroad of the Northern Pacific Railway Company.
'At the point of collision the railroad runs approximately north and south, while the highway crossing is at right angles. To the south of the highway, extending parallel to it and 175 feet ‘from the point of collision, another railway track passes over defendant’s track by means of a trestle and dirt embankment thirty feet high. Because of these embankments and a curve farther south, no portion
The automobile was destroyed, and plaintiff by complaint filed July 2, 1919, brought this action for damages, alleging as negligence on the part of defendants that they were running the engine at an excessive speed, apid that they failed to blow the whistle, ring the bell, or give any alarm of its approach, and permitted the automobile bell-ringing signal to get into defective condition so it would not sound upon the approach of an engine. Plaintiff had a verdict for $1,150, upon which judgment was entered. This appeal is from that judgment and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial.
I. Defendant railway company, by appropriate demurrer, setting out misjoinder, by motion at the opening of the trial, and by motion for a directed verdict, sought to be eliminated from the action as a joint defendant with the Director-General. The demurrer and motions were overruled, and the cause proceeded to judgment against all defendants.
We take judicial notice that at the time of the injury, and
Defendant railway company was completely ousted from all
II. ' Counsel for defendants earnestly insist that the evidence shows that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and that their motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained on that ground.
This court has repeatedly held that, on a motion for a
The testimony on the part of plaintiff, if taken as true,
Defendant’s contention amounts to this: That, considering plaintiff’s testimony as true, the engine, traveling at the rate of forty miles per hour, would have required a fraction less than three seconds to move to the point of collision after being discovered emerging from beneath the trestle by plaintiff; that plaintiff, being seven or eight feet from the rails and traveling seven or eight miles per hour, was negligent in failing to stop his automobile in three seconds and in a space short enough to have avoided the collision, which would have been something less than seven or eight feet.
While some of this testimony is contradicted by defendants’ witnesses, if considered in the light most favorable to plaintiff, it did not present a situation wherein the lower court was justified in holding that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and no error was committed in denying the motion for a directed verdict. (Sprague v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 40 Mont. 481, 107 Pac.
III. This disposes of defendants’ contention that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict and is contrary to the law as embodied in the court’s instructions to the jury.
IV. Defendants’ offered instruction No. D-7 was amply
We recommend that the judgment and order appealed from be affirmed as to defendants Walker D. Hines, Director-General of Railroads, and A. A. Melton, and- that the judgment be reversed as to the defendant the Northern Pacific Railway Company, and that respondent recover his costs on appeal.
Per Curiam : For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed as to defendants Walker D. Hines, Director-General of Railroads, and A. A. Melton, and the judgment is reversed as to -the defendant the Northern Pacific Railway Company; respondent to recover his costs on appeal.