124 N.Y. 414 | NY | 1891
Chicago street, in the city of Buffalo, runs substantially north and south, and is crossed. at right angles by
On the 15th of September, 1888, at about one o’clock in the afternoon, Charles Oldenburg, the plaintiffs’ intestate, a man of mature years, was walking south on the west side of Chicago-street, and as he approached this crossing, the gates were down to enable a passenger train of four or five coaches to pass, toward the west on the north track. He stopped until the last car had crossed, and as the gates began to rise, he went on. At the same time a team started to cross from the south, thegateman having shouted to it to go ahead. It went very slowly. Until Oldenburg had passed over the middle track, he could see-nothing south thereof and west of the sidewalk on which he* was walking, because his view in that direction was cut off by fifteen passenger coaches standing on the middle track and extending westward for a block and a half. The most easterly of these coaches reached half way across the west sidewalk and projected two feet beyond the rails of the track upon either side. Thus his ■ view to the south-west was shut off until he had passed by the end of the coach, which would place him at a point two feet south of the middle track. Until he reached this point, which was only five feet from the south track, he could see substantially no part of that track
The deceased did not enter upon the crossing until the flagman had not only given a signal of safety by raising the gates, but had also shouted to the team in waiting to go ahead. Whether he heard the shout or not, the open gate was virtually an invitation to him to proceed and the team crossing slowly
While the deceased had the right to rely to a certain extent upon the assurance thus given by the defendant that it was safo for him to go on, it was still his duty to be on the lookout for danger, and to exercise the same care that a man of ordinary prudence would have exercised under the same circumstances. The degree of care depended upon his knowledge of the situation, or upon those facts that he would have discovered by the use of ordinary vigilance. It does not appear that he had ever seen this crossing before, or .that he knew anything about it, except what he observed on the occasion when he met his death. In this respect, as well as by the implied invitation to proceed arising from the use of safety gates, this case is easily distinguished from those relied upon by the defendant. (Woodard v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 106 N. Y. 369; Young v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 107 id. 500.)
It is claimed that he should have looked to the right, so as to see the approaching engine, and in front, so as to see the descending gate, but can it be held as matter of law that he had time for this, and also to use due care in other respects ? According to the evidence, not more than nine or ten seconds elapsed after the passenger train had gone by on the north track before the engine came down on the south track. During this short period he proceeded to cross, passed over two tracks, reached the third where be could not safely stop, because at any time the passenger coaches standing there
As this is the only question, properly raised by exception, that has been discussed by the learned counsel for the defendant, the judgment should be affirmed with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.