107 N.Y.S. 1068 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The plaintiff’s testator lost his life as the result of a collision between an, automobile iii which he was riding and one of the trains of the defendant railroad at the crossing-near Van Cortlandt Park in the city of New York on the 12th day of June, 1904. The facts are stated in the case of Noakes v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company (121 App. Div. 716), which was an action by a passenger in this same automobile who was injured at the same time. The chauffeur operating the autómo
In the Noakes case we sustained the judgment upon the ground ' that the age, sex and situation of the plaintiff in that.case, a girl of sixteen .years of age,-seated between her mother and the. deceased, made -it a question for the jury as to whether she was negligent in not.looking and seeing the train and warning the chauffeur to stop the automobile before it was upon the track. It was expressly stated' that the age, sex of the plaintiff, the situation in which she was placed, and the surrounding circumstances Were such that a question was presented as to whether it was negligence for the plaintiff not to look, which was for the jury, and the case was riot one of those which- imposes an absolute.duty upon a passenger' in a. vehicle of looking and listening for an approaching train, a violation of which is, as matter of law, contributory negligence. We have in this case a man thirty-six years of age seated on the back seat, of
The duty imposed upon the deceased requires that he should look and listen before the vehicle is placed in a position that an accident would result if a train is approaching, and a failure to perform that duty is contributory negligence that relieves the defendant from liability. (Hoag v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 111 N. Y. 199; Brickell v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 120 id. 290.) The special circumstances that existed in the Koakes case which we thought justified the court in submitting the question of contributory negligence to the jury, namely, the age and sex of the plaintiff who was injured, did not exist in this case, as here the deceased was a man thirty-six years of age, in full possession of his faculties and seated in the automobile on the side from which the train was approaching. There is certainly nothing, either in his age or sex or in the position in which the deceased was seated, that excused him from the performance of the duty which the law imposes upon every person approaching a railroad track of taking such measures as may be nec
I think, therefore, that the "judgment and order appealed from must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to' the appellant to abide the event.
Patterson, P. J., Laughlin, Clarke and Scott, JR, concurred.,
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. . •