34 Ind. App. 90 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
Action to recover damages on account of personal injuries caused by a collision at a railroad crossing. Trial, verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $1,600,
The negligence charged against appellant was the running of its train up to and over the street crossing at a dangerous rate of speed and without signals. A street car track crossed appellant’s railway at the point of collision. Appellee was a motorman employed by the street car company, and was injured by the collision of appellant’s passenger-train with an electric street car operated by himself as motorman. An ordinance of the city of Columbus, within which the collision occurred, restricted the rate of railroad trains within said city to four miles an hour. The train in question was run at the rate of sixteen miles an hour. It was a regular passenger-train due to leave .Columbus station at 4:15 o’clock p. m. each day. Appellant contends that the facts exhibited by the answers to interrogatories established contributory negligence on the part of appellee, no other proposition being argued.
The accident occurred at Chestnut street. It is shown by the answers that appellant’s track ran in a straight line from a point 1,200 feet east of said street to a point 1,700 west thereof, crossing the street at right angles; the right of way being as much as twenty feet wide. The street and car track thereon were substantially level, except that the center line of the railroad track was sixteen to eighteen inches higher than a point in the street eighteen feet north thereof. There was a cottage house and wood-shed on the
Ordinary care consists in using precautions proportionate to the danger. The street car company is a common carrier of passengers. We know that large numbers of persons are transferred over the city streets by such instrumentalities. The cars are large and the propelling force of great power. The result of collision with rapidly moving railroad trains can not but be productive of injury and loss of life. The ability of a motorman in charge of a street car to regulate its speed and to stop it is, as a general rule, dependent upon his inclination. When appellee stopped his car twelve or fourteen feet from the track, he knew to what extent his view was obstructed. If it was obstructed to such an extent as to prevent his discovery of a train
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the general' verdict.