This is a ease of injury to an automobile truck driver at a highway-railway crossing. The only open question is whether a verdict
In answer to special questions submitted pursuant to our suggestion in Penna. R. R. v. Stegeman, 22 F.(2d) 69, 72, tho jury found that an automatic crossing bell, which should have been set ringing by the approaching train, was not ringing, and that the plaintiff did stop, look, and listen at the properly effective point. For the purposes of this opinion, but without deciding, we may assume that the latter special finding by the jury was inconsistent with the undisputed evidence because, if tho supposed view-obstructing cars wore where defendant’s proofs place them, they did not obstruct, and, if they were where plaintiff says they were, they shut off his view so that he could not look effectively. We further so assume that the existence of possible danger upon the tracks being crossed before coming to tho oho actually dangerous, and tho roughness of the roadway, and the necessity of watching automobiles coming from the opposite direction, did not excuse plaintiff from looking more carefully to his right. We place the affirmance of tho submission solely upon the effect of tho silent crossing hell in lessening plaintiff’s otherwise uneseapable obligation to have discovered in time the approaching train, and in therefore so far mitigating his undoubted lack of possible care as to make it a question of fact rather than of law whether his conduct was reasonably prudent. Wabash Ry. v. Glass (C. C. A. 6)
We have many times considered this question, the last in Leuthold v. Pa. R. R.,
We are not cited to any decided ease precisely in point. In tho present one, plaintiff’s petition alleged that the hell had been out of order, for so-me time, but not that he knew it; and no such knowledge on his part should be inferred from the petition, for it would have defeated the purpose of the allegation. His testimony is entirely consistent with the theory that he did not know the bell was out of order; it is more inconsistent with the contrary conclusion. If the defendant had, by its cross-examination, developed that plaintiff did Have this knowledge, we would have had a different case.
The judgment is affirmed.
