21 Barb. 339 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
The action is brought to recover damages for injuries to the plaintiffs’ horse and wagon, occasioned by a collision while the horse and wagon were crossing the defendants’ rail road in the town of Manchester, Ontario county, in May, 1852. On the trial, at the Ontario circuit in
We think, under these circumstances, that the plaintiffs were under no obligation to detain the witness for the purpose of further examination by the defendants’ counsel. We are not called upon to decide whether, in every case where a party introduces and examines a witness, hé is bound, at the peril of losing-the benefit of his evidence, to keep him in court until the trial is-closed, for the benefit of the adverse party. We incline to think the counsel should avail themselves of the opportunity to cross-examine before the witness leaves the stand >
The important question, however, in the case, remains to be considered. We are clearly of the opinion that the plaintiffs’ own evidence did not show a case which entitled them to recover. It is a well settled and incontrovertible principle that an action for negligence cannot be sustained if the wrongful act or negligence of the plaintiff, or his agent, co-operated with the misconduct of the defendant or his agent, to produce the damages sustained. In order to recover, in such a case, the plaintiff must be without fault. (Haring, adm'r, v. The New York and Erie Rail Road Co., 13 Barb. 9. Clark v. The Syracuse and Utica Rail Road Co., 11 id. 112. Spencer v. The Utica and Schenectady Rail Road Co., 5 id. 337.) Authorities in support of this proposition might be multiplied indefinitely. That the defendants must be proved to have been guilty of negligence, in order to warrant a recovery, is too plain to require a single author! ty to prove. If it had appeared, without a conflict of evidence, that the defendants rang their bell as the statute requires, on and previous to the occasion of the collision, the case would be utterly destitute of evidence of any negligence on their part. But on that question there was evidence on both sides, and the verdict of the jury should be regarded as settling it in favor of the plaintiffs. There was, however, we think, inexcusable negligence on the part of the person driving and in charge of the plaintiffs’ horse and wagon. The plaintiffs’ evidence shows, without contradiction, that the defendants’ rail road was on a straight line from the Paddleford station, which is northeast of the road-crossing where the collision in question occurred, to that at Farmington, which is southwest of this crossing. That from the crossing, for a distance of from half a mile to a mile east, the railroad was in like manner in a straight direction, and the track for sixty or eighty rods east of the crossing was elevated from three to five feet above the level of the meadow through which the rail road ran.
This is as favorable a statement for the plaintiffs as the evidence will warrant. It seems to me to present a case of utter recklessness on the part of the driver of the horse. If he had been desirous of courting destruction, it is difficult to conceive a course better adapted to the object than the one he pursued. He knew he was in the vicinity of the railroad, for he had been driving upon a walk in plain sight of it, for half a mile. He knew also that the road led across it, for he had passed over it that morning. The most ordinary care and caution would have prompted him to cast his eyes back and forward upon the rail road, to see if a train was approaching; and if he had done so, he could not have failed- to discover the train in question. It
Ordered accordingly.
Johnson, T. R. Strong and Welles, Justices.]