Railway Co. v. Hicks

89 Tenn. 301 | Tenn. | 1890

Caldwell, J.

That part of the charge set out in the first assignment of error is erroneous in so far as the jury were therein told that the law required the engineer and other operatives on the train to use all means in their power to 'stop the train and prevent an accident “whenever” or “as soon as” the plaintiff, Hicks, appeared on the track, without reference to the distance in advance at which he may have so appeared, and without reference to the presence or absence of danger at the particular time.

The plaintiff himself was an .employe of the railway company, engaged in its business and rightfully on its track at the time, passing from station to station on a railway velocipede, in the same direction that the train was moving. He was prepared to give the right of way to all trains on short notice, and it was his duty, to himself and to the company, to do so whenever he discovered the necessity for it.

Therefore, the employes operating the extra train, on seeing him in the distance — if such was the fact — were authorized to assume that he would surrender the track in time to save himself, and to act on this assumption so long as not refuted by the actual fact of his remaining in the way *303until the train came in such proximity to him as to make danger of an accident probable.

The logic of the rule applied by the trial Judge would require that a train be stopped as soon as in sight of section hands at work on the track, when in fact and in reason such hands are expected to continue at work until the train comes reasonably near, and then get out of the way, without causing the train to stop at all.

Instead of • that part of the charge herein referred to as erroneous, the Court should have instructed the jury, in substance, that when plaintiff appeared on the track, if he was then in such proximity to the extra train that danger to his person was probable, or if afterward the train came so near to him as to render it likely, under all the circumstances, that he might be injured if the train were not stopped, then it was the duty of the engineer and other operatives to use all the means in their power to stop the train and prevent a collision.

Reverse and remand.

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