196 Pa. 213 | Pa. | 1900
Opinion by
The assignments of error which we are asked to consider present the single question whether the case should have been withdrawn from the jury on the ground of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence. From the testimony presented by the plaintiff it appeared that he was driving two horses to a top-buggy after dark on a country road which is crossed by the tracks of the defendant’s road at an oblique angle. On the side on which the train approached the crossing, and 500 or 600 feet from it, the railroad tracks are in a cut of considerable depth. There is also a curve in the tracks, with its convex side toward the highway. The plaintiff, when about 175 feet from the crossing, stopped, looked and listened, and in order to obtain a better view turned his horses to one side, so that he could see up the tracks as far as possible. Neither seeing nor hearing a train he drove on. After he had gone about twenty feet a boy who was riding with him drew down a side curtain and looked up the tracks and reported that no train was in sight. His horses at this time were on a slow trot, and so continued until the crossing was reached. The diagonal crossing was. forty-five feet in length, and going in the direction in which the plaintiff drove, the left hind wheel of a wagon might be three feet beyond the tracks before the right hind wheel was. clear of them. The plaintiff knew nothing of the approach of the train until he was about the middle of the crossing, ánd'
To have determined it as matter of law the court must have held either that it was the plaintiff’s duty to stop a second time or that he drove on the tracks in front of a moving train which he could have seen if he had looked before placing himself in a position of danger. In order to justify the court in treating the question of contributory negligence as one of law, not only the facts but the inferences to be drawn.from them must be free of doubt. If there is doubt as to either the case must go to the jury: McNeal v. Pittsburg, etc., Ry. Co., 181 Pa. 184; Davidson v. Lake Shore, etc., Ry. Co., 171 Pa. 522. The whole duty of one about to cross the tracks of a steam road at grade is not in all cases confined to his stopping, looking and listening for the approach of a train. He must stop at a proper place, and when he proceeds he should continue to look and to observe the precautions which the danger of the situation requires. He should stop again if there is another place nearer the tracks from which he can better discern whether there is danger. But whether the place at which he stopped was the proper place at which to stop, and whether there is a second place at which he should stop, are questions of fact for the jury, and not matters of law for the court: Ellis v. Lake Shore, etc., R. R. Co., 138 Pa. 506; Urias v. Penna. R. Co., 152 Pa. 326; Whitman v. Penna. R. Co., 156 Pa. 175; Ely v. Pittsburg, etc., Ry. Co., 158 Pa. 233; Cookson v. Pittsburg, etc., Ry. Co., 179 Pa. 184. In the ease last cited it was said: “The usual and customary place of stopping by people using a road cannot
The judgment is affirmed.