This appeal is from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury in a civil action brought by the Administratrix of the Estate of Herbert Stevens against the Trustee in Reorganization of the Chicago and North Western Railway Company, to recover damages for the death of Stevens, who was killed at Dumont, Iowa, at about 9:30 o’clock P. M. on January 28, 1936, as the result of a collision between the automobile in which he was riding as a guest passenger and a gondola freight car of the Railway Company which was standing upon the grade crossing at Dumont, where
The case has been tried twice. The first trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. There was an appeal by the defendant and a reversal upon the ground that, under the testimony of the driver of the automobile, a finding that the negligence of the defendant, if any, was a proximate cause of the collision and the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, was not justified. See Megan v. Stevens, 8 Cir.,
The important question now presented is whether, taking that view of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, it was sufficient to support a finding that the defendant was guilty of any actionable 'negligence in connection with the blocking of the crossing with the freight train.
While the plaintiff charged that the defendant was negligent in six particulars, the grounds of negligence can be reduced to three: (1) Unnecessarily obstructing the crossing; (2) failure to protect the traveling public by giving warning in ad'dition to the mere presence of the freight car across the track; (3) occupying the crossing for an unreasonable and unnecessary period of time.
The controlling law is that of Iowa. See Erie Railroad Company v. Tompkins,
The facts — without going into unnecessary detail — are, in substance, as follows: The crossing was level and unobstructed as to view and was of the usual type and with the' usual warning signs. Highway Number 10, which runs east and west, was 28 feet wide, and there was a highway sign about 375 feet east of the tracks, and a cross-arm sign in the northeast angle of the intersection, reading “Railroad Crossing”. On the evening of January ■ 28, 1936, Herbert Stevens was riding with Lewis Fisher, an experienced driver, who was operating a 1933 Chevrolet automobile equipped with good lights and good brakes. In the early morning of that day Fisher had driven Stevens from' Crystal. Lake, Iowa, to Iowa City to visit Stevens’ wife, who was in the hospital there. In going east to Iowa City they had used Highway Number 10. They were returning west from Iowa City upon the same highway when the accident occurred. There was snow upon the pavement and for some two hours before the accident it had been snowing. “The snow wasn’t falling so terribly heavy. There was quite a wind. At times the vision would be fairly clear; then at times the wind would seem to whip the snow in front of you and you couldn’t see very far.” There was a windshield wiper on the driver’s side of the .windshield only. His side of the windshield was kept clean at all times. Sometimes the driver could see 100 feet or more, ahead, but he could not see that far when the wind blew snow in front of the automobile. He was driving between 30 and 35 miles an hour as he approached the crossing at Dumont. He first saw the freight car when he was within 50 to 75 feet of it. He was then passing a roadway which other evidence in the case shows was approximately 70 feet from the tracks. He put' on his brakes. The automobile slowed down a little, and it seemed to skid just a little as he reached the freight car. A sudden gust of snow had prevented his seeing the train sooner. There had been occasional gusts previously. His estimate of the distance within which he could have stopped his automobile at the speed he was traveling was 75 feet. There was “some snow” on the side of the freight car. There was no flagman
Mr. and Mrs. Aukes, witnesses for the plaintiff, testified that the train had blocked the crossing for about twenty minutes when the accident occurred. They lived in a trailer-house about S40 feet east of the crossing. Mr. Aukes was outside of his house and about 300 feet east of the crossing when the train pulled in. lie could see the train as it pulled in. Fie returned to the house and after he had been there some time he heard a crash. Fie looked out of a window, and sometimes could see the train and sometimes not on account of snow. The snow ’was whipping. “It was not snowing so awful bad, but it was whipping, and sometimes you could see it [the train] real plain, and other times you couldn’t hardly see it at all.”
There is no substantial dispute in the evidence except with respect to the extent to which visibility was affected by falling or blowing snow and as to the length of time that the crossing was blocked.
According to Fisher, he could see 100 feet ahead except during snow flurries. He saw the freight car about 70 feet ahead during a snow flurry. Mr. Aukes was able to see the train from a distance of 300 feet without the aid of lights, when it pulled into Dumont. After he heard a crash and looked from the window of his trailer, he could sometimes see the train S40 feet away. It is apparent that, while the snow affected visibility at times, it did not prevent an object as large as a gondola car from being visible to a driver upon the highway for some substantial distance ahead.
There is no dispute with respect to the fact that the train was placed where it was necessary that it be placed if the coal car was to be set out at Dumont in the manner selected by the train crew. According to the undisputed evidence, the business of delivering this car of coal and of returning the engine to the train had not been completed by the train crew when the collision occurred and the crew were then still engaged in completing the necessary engine movements. There was no evidence which would justify a conclusion that the crew, in selecting the method for setting out the car at Dumont, did anything which was unusual or not in accord
It seems to us that the evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses to the effect that the train actually obstructed this crossing for twenty minutes before the collision occurred is equally consistent with two hypotheses: one, that the train crew were dilatory in setting out the coal car consigned to Dumont; the other, that to perform the necessary operations in connection with setting out the car required twenty minutes. -The fact that they testified that it took them five minutes to complete this operation, and that the plaintiff’s witnesses said that the train was there twenty minutes, does not of itself prove that the crew were guilty of unreasonable or unnecessary delay in completing their work and moving the train.
Evidence which is consistent with two conflicting hypotheses tends to support neither. Cupples Company Manufacturers v. National Labor Relations Board, 8 Cir.,
The situation, therefore, with which we are confronted is, in substance, this: The train crew caused the train to obstruct the crossing in question on a night when snow was falling and there were occasional snow flurries which further reduced visibility, for the purpose of setting out a car destined to Dumont, without providing a signal man at the crossing to warn approaching travelers upon the highway; and while they were engaged in performing the duties which they had stopped at Dumont to perform, the automobile carrying Herbert Stevens was driven into the side of the standing train.
We are of the opinion that the Supreme Court of Iowa, in the case of Dolan v. Bremner,
“Conceding that the appellee and the driver of the car in which she was riding may have been deceived by fog or mist overhanging the crossing, which because of the color of the railroad car made its presence on the crossing indiscernible in such fog or mist, we do not think there is anything in the evidence that would impose upon appellant the duty of anticipating that such a condition would exist, or that would impose upon appellant the duty of anticipating that appellee and the driver of the automobile in which she was riding would not, by the exercise of ordinary care, avoid the dangers incident to such a condition if it did exist. On the contrary, we think the railroad company would be justified in assuming that, if there was a mist or fog upon the highway, the driver of the car in which appellee was riding would reduce his speed, so that he would not travel into or through such mist or fog at any greater rate of speed than would enable him to stop within the distance in which he could see objects ahead of him.
“Even if it be conceded, however, that ¡he evidence was such that it made a question for the jury as to the necessity of other and additional warning signs or signals, and, even if the appellant railroad company may have been negligent in that respect, we think the evidence insufficient to show that such negligence, if any, on the part of the railroad company was the proximate cause of the accident and injuries to the appellee. Railroad tracks necessarily cross public highways, and it is necessary that trains at times be stopped upon such public highway crossings. When this is done and the railroad company is making reasonable and legitimate use of such crossing, the presence of the train itself is sufficient warning to any one using the highway, and there is no duty upon the part of the railroad company to anticipate that one using the highway will not see such train and be apprised of its presence as fully as he would be if other signs or warnings were used.”
In the course of its opinion, the Court quotes with approval from cases which hold that a train upon a crossing is in itself effective and adequate warning of its presence, and that, in the absence of statute, no other warning is required. It quotes the following language from Crosby v. Great Northern Ry. Co,
Finally, the Supreme Court of Iowa says (
The defendant had the right to occupy this highway crossing at Dumont for legitimate business purposes. Butters v. Chicago, M. St. P. & P. R. Co.,
We are satisfied that, under the law of Iowa, as announced in the cases of Butters v. Chicago, M. St. P. & P. R. Co.,
In view of our conclusion, we think it is not necessary to consider any other questions.
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
See in this connection: Orton v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 6 Cir.,
