The petitioner seeks to recover damages for the death of her husband. Her claim is made under the statute giving a rerhedy to the personal representatives of a person killed, where death is caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default of another. (Rev. p. 294.) She charges that the death of her husband was caused by the negligence of the employes of the receivers. The negligence imputed to them need not be particularized—it may be admitted to be sufficient to give her a right of action. The important question is, Was not the person killed also guilty of negligence
Mr. Den Blaker, the petitioner’s testator, was killed June 12th, 1876, while attempting to cross the track of the Midland Railway, on a public highway known as Midland avenue, in the county of Bergen. The railway at this crossing is built in a cut which, at the crossing, is about four feet deep, and increases in depth as it extends westward, until it reaches a depth of twelve and a half feet above the top of the rails. The length of the cut, from its western extremity to the crossing, is five hundred and eighty-four feet. Midland avenue, as it approaches the railway "from the north, is also built in a cut for a distance of one hundred and thirty-five feet, and descends to the railway, from the point where the descent begins, at the rate of two and a half feet in every fifty feet. At a point on Midland avenue nine hundred feet north of the crossing, the track of the railway west of the cut can be seen for over one-fourth of a mile ; at a point on the avenue seventy-five feet north of the centre line of the railway at the crossing, a person sitting in an open wagon can see up the cut, westward, one hundred and sixty feet; at fifty feet distant, he can look up the cut a distance of two hundred and sixty feet, and at twenty-five
It is now an established principle of law, almost universally recognized, that a person intending to cross a railroad track, is bound to look and listen for an approaching train before going upon it, and if he fails to do so, and injury ensues, he is without remedy; or, if he looks and listens, and sees or hears a train approaching, and then daringly assumes the hazard of attempting to cross in advance of it, and fails, he must bear the consequences of his folly. In a case substantially identical in its facts with the one in hand, the supreme court of the United States recently said, speaking by Justice Field: “ The failure of the engineer to sound the whistle or ring the bell, if such were the fact, did not relieve the deceased from the necessity of taking ordinary precautions for his safety. Negligence of the company’s employes in these particulars was no excuse for negligence on his part. He was bound to look and listen, before attempting to cross the railroad track, in order to avoid an approaching train, and not go carelessly into a place of danger. Had he used his senses, he could not have failed both to hear and see the train which was coming. If he omitted to use them, and went thoughtlessly upon the track, he was guilty of culpable negligence, and so far contributed to his injuries as to deprive him of any right to complain of others. If, using them, he saw the train coming, and yet undertook to cross the track (instead of waiting for the train to pass), and was injured, the consequences of his mistake and temerity cannot be cast upon the company. No railroad company can be held liable for a failure of experiments of that kind. If one chooses, in such a position, to take risks, he must bear the possible consequences of failure.” Railroad Co. v. Houston, 5 Otto 702. Precisely similar views have been repeatedly enunciated by the courts of this state. A simple reference to the cases is all that need be done.
If we test the claim of the petitioner by these rules, it is obvious it must be rejected. It is plain, the disaster could not have happened had the deceased, in approaching the crossing, exercised the caution which the law requires, and which any person of reasonable prudence would have exercised in approaching a place of such well-known danger. So far as appears, his organs of sight and hearing were perfect, and had he made that use of them which a reasonable regard for his safety demanded, it would have been impossible for him not to have both seen and heard the train in time to have averted a collision. If the statements of the fireman are believed—and there is no evidence contradicting them— it is manifest death was the result of foolhardy heedlessness. The fact that the disaster happened, tends very strongly, in my judgment, to confirm the substantial truth of his story. But, in my opinion, scarcely any rational view of the evidence, as a whole, can be adopted, which will not fully establish such a complete case of contributory negligence as bars all right to damages.
The relief asked must be denied, and the petition dismissed.
