150 Iowa 33 | Iowa | 1911
Lead Opinion
John Semmens was killed in Dubuque County, Iowa, by a train operated by defendant, which collided with deceased at and in a public highway crossing in said county. The negligence charged against defendant is “that there was a high embankment on either side of said defendant’s tracks at and easterly of said railway crossing; that said defendant railroad company was negligent in allowing obstruction consisting of tall weeds, trees and . grass to be and remain upon and along the top of said embankment alongside of its tracks so as to prevent persons approaching the same from the- north from having a clear and unobstructed view of its tracks and cars approaching thereon from the east. Said railroad company was also negligent in failing to sound any bell or whistle at the regular whistling post for said crossing, or give any other warning of the approach of said train before reaching said crossing; plaintiff further states that said defendant was further negligent in this: That defendant’s engineer operating the engine of said train saw the team driven by said deceased approaching said public crossing in time to have averted the accident had he used ordinary care in attempting so to do; that said-engineer at the time he first saw said team approach said crossing knew of the dangerous position in which the deceased was placed, and said engineer could, by the exercise of ordinary care, have avoided the injury to said John Semmens, deceased, had he used ordinary care in attempting to do so or to slacken or stop the speed of the train sooner than he did, but said defendant’s engineer knowing of the dangerous and perilous position in which deceased was placed failed to stop said train or' slacken its speed sufficiently to have, averted said injury.” These allegations of negligence were denied by defendant, and it also pleaded contributory negligence
I knew John Semmens in his lifetime. I remember of the Clipper train going east from Farley the afternoon that John Semmens was killed. Prior to the time the Clipper train came west I was going after my cow; she was tied up alongside the railroad. I know where the public highway is that runs east and west near Farley, and am familiar with where the highway turns off north to go up to the Glew home. My cow was tied about one
The engineer testified that when he first saw deceased he was approaching the right of way, and “I judged from the motion of the horses’ heads that they were moving at that rate of speed; that the driver or party who was with them did not know that the train was approaching. I immediately shut off steam, set the brake and commenced to blow the alarm.”
Under this state of facts it is clear that deceased was guilty of contributory negligence. In Schaefer v. C., M. & St. P. R. R., 62 Iowa, 624, we said: “If the plaintiff’s son had stopped four or five rods from the track and looked for the train this accident would not have occurred, or if he had not stopped but looked for the train at a place where it could have been seen, the accident would not have ■occurred. Where a person traveling on the highway and approaching a known crossing of the railway track with knowledge that the view of the approaching train is, to an extent obscured, heedlessly permits the team he is driving to pass over such highway pretty fast or allowed the horses to trot, and makes -no effort to look or listen for the approaching train for a distance of eighteen rods from the track, he is guilty of such contributory negligence as will prevent him from recovering if a collision occurs providing there are no circumstances which are calculated to distract his attention. Under the circumstances above stated and the uneontr over ted evidence in this case, we think ordinary care required that the deceased should have stopped and looked or listened at some. place between the place where the team was stopped and the track. There was nothing to prevent his doing so and nothing to distract
In view of the contributory negligence of the deceased there can be Ho recovery in this case, unless it be on the theory that the engineer or fireman on defendant’s train saw plaintiff’s intestate in a place of peril, and thereafter failed to take the necessary steps to avoid the collision, and that but for such failure the accident would not have happened.
III. The doctrine of last fair chance as applied to the facts of this case is very well settled by our recent decisions. In Bruggeman v. R. R., 147 Iowa, 187, we said:
In the application of that doctrine it is not necessary to find that the negligence of the plaintiff had ceased to operate before the accident occurred, and that, if it had ceased to operate, the defendant with knowledge of plaintiff’s danger, due to his own negligence, had failed to take reasonable precautions to avoid the injury to him. It was enough to call for the application of that doctrine that the defendant’s employees knew of plaintiff’s danger in time to have avoided injury to him by the exercise of reasonable care, even though he was negligent in putting himself in a place of danger, and continued to be negligent in not looking out for his own safety. Barry v. R. R. Co., 119 Iowa, 62; Doherty v. R. R. Co., 137 Iowa, 358; Purcell v. R. R. Co., 109 Iowa, 629; Kelley v. R. R. Co., 118 Iowa, 390. There is a general agreement in the authorities that where an engineer actually sees a person in a position of danger, and then fails to do what he reasonably can to prevent an accident, the railroad company is held responsible for the resulting injury, irrespective of the question of contributory negligence. If just before the climax only one party had the power to prevent the catastrophe, and he neglected to use it, the legal responsibility is his alone. The trial court evidently • had in mind • the
Again in Welsh v. R. R., 148 Iowa, 200, we said:
While it is true that a motorman is not bound to anticipate that a person not already in a position of danger from the approaching car will negligently put himself in such position of danger, yet when the motorman sees that a person on the streets is apparently placing himself in a position of danger without being aware of the approaching car, it is plainly his duty to take cognizance of that fact and avoid injury to him if practicable, and we have recognized the rule that under such circumstances the negligence of the persons in danger, which has thus become apparent to the motorman, will not relieve the street car company from liability for the negligence of the motorman in not taking reasonable precautions to avoid an accident. . . . In Kelly v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. R. Co., 118
We were running about thirty-five miles an hour when we got in the vicinity of the. Glew Crossing. The engine was working steam. The first thing that attracted my attention after leaving the whistling post was that I noticed on the south side (the wagon road is parallel there with the railroad) a threshing outfit and a vehicle ahead with horse or horses attached to it. The team ahead was getting fractious. I didn’t really know whether the party was trying to hurry the team along or whether they were acting that way themselves, purposely, but this road runs parallel to the Central track there on south side as you go up. This crossing comes, and you can’t turn a thing on that. I didn’t know but that the man who was driving the team was trying to go ahead, and come across the crossing ahead of me. When I got to a certain point where I knew I was going to get to the crossing first I paid no more attention to them. After I looked away from that team T looked toward the track qf the right of way of the company, my eyes turned back to the track. As my eyes came round I noticed horses’ heads just approaching the right of way of the company on this crossing. I judged from the motion of the horses’ heads that they were moving at that rate of speed that the driver or party who was with them did not know that the train was approaching. I immediately shut off steam, set the brake and commenced to blow the alarm. The alarm was the first thing
The fireman in the engine testified as follows:
At that time the engine was between two or three hundred feet from the crossing. . . . The engineer sounded the whistle. As we proceeded toward the crossing the bell was rung by myself. As we proceeded toward the crossing, after leaving the whistling post, I noticed something in the roadway on the south or left-hand side of the track. I was on that side of the, engine. There was a threshing machine and a team and buggy ahead of
The only thing which plaintiff offers to meet this testimony is some computations based upon the speed' of the train, the place where it stopped, the distance traveled after the engineer saw the deceased, the fact, that people riding in the train did not notice any application of brakes until after the team was struck, and the supposed distance traveled by the train after the engineer saw deceased. There was some testimony to the effect that such a train running at thirty-five miles an hour, as this one was, could be stopped within three hundred feet; but the testimony also shows that it would run at least seventy-five feet after the engineer saw. one in peril before he could get his brake to working, sound the alarm and shut off his steam. The most favorable testimony for plaintiff showed that in a distance of two hundred feet a train running at thirty-five miles an hour might be slowed down to ten or twelve. There was also testimony to the effect that the emergency brake was not set until after the team was struck. There is no method of telling mathematically where the train was when the engineer and fireman first saw the team which deceased was driving. The exact place where the team was when first seen by the engineer is a mere guess, but' it was certainly not more than fifty feet from the track. According to some of the testimony the team was going on a jog trot at the rate of about five miles per hour. If we were to assume these guesses correct, and that the train was going seven times as fast
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring specially). — I concur in the result. I do not concur in the discussion of the doctrine of “last clear chance.”