94 Ky. 114 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
In the month of July of the year 1889, the appellant, in company with a friend, was in his buggy on his way to the Danville Pair, and in crossing the railway track of the appellee his buggy was struck by a passing train that demolished it, throwing appellee to the ground and seriously injuring him. He insti
It seems that the turnpike and the track of the railroad run parallel for some distance, and where, or near the point at which, the appellant started on his journey, is a small village called Moreland, and about one and a quarter miles of Moreland is another small village called Milledgeville. The railway track crosses the turnpike twice between these villages. Moreland is south of Milledgeville, and the appellant was traveling north when the train struck Mm. Starting then from Moreland, when you get eight or nine hundred yards from that
It is a level country, and the track of the road is in plain view for over a mile from the last crossing-back towards Moreland, whether on the turnpike or the railway, until you get within about ninety feet of the second crossing, where the accident happened. For this ninety feet there is a side cut in the turnpike that obstructs the view south towards Moreland. The train that did the injury was going north in the same direction the plaintiff was traveling. The testimony shows that after leaving Moreland, and when approaching the first crossing, the appellant looked back to see if there was a train behind him, and, seeing none, passed the first crossing safely. In approaching the second crossing, and when within two hundred yards of it, he looked back again, and there was no train, and again, when within seventy-five or one hundred yards of the second crossing, looked again, and saw no train, and then drove on to the track without looking any more, traveling, as we conjecture, at the rate of six or seven miles an hour, and as soon as his buggy was on the track the train struck it. The train was past due, and was running at a rapid rate of speed to make up for lost time, and must have been going at the rate of sixty miles an hour, or at a greater speed. If the distance from where the last look was made is only seventy-five or one hundred yards from the crossing, the buggy could
It is insisted by counsel for the railway company that it is the duty of one on a highway crossing the track of a railway to stop and listen in order that he may know it is safe to cross, and if he had stopped and listened when he reached the track before going upon it, he might have seen the train, or heard the rumbling noise of its approach, or the sound of its whistle, and if he failed to do so, it is such contributory negligence as bars the recovery and authorizes a non-suit, although the railway company may have been guilty of neglect. It is true that the appellant, being within thirty yards of the crossing when reaching the cut, might have looked back and seen- a train nearly a mile off, but having exercised the precaution that he did, it seems to us to be a question for the jury to determine whether
In the. case of Cahill v. Cincinnati, &c., R. Co., 92 Ky., 345, where the injury occurred at a private-crossing where those crossing the track were warned of approaching trains by signals given at a depot near to but not at the crossing, this court said: “But to decide that the failure of one to look along a railroad before attempting to cross it, is,
On the facts presented by this record it is not by any means certain the appellant acted so negligently as to preclude a recovery, and while the accident might not have happened if he had stopped at the track and listened, men of ordinary judgment might well conclude that the appellee, in looking back as often as three times, and the last time when within one hundred yards of the crossing, and seeing no-train for a mile back, had the right to believe, as a reasonably prudent man, that he could cross the track with safety, and particularly when he had reason to suppose the train inflicting the injury had passed, and if not, that the blowing of the whistle would warn him of the danger. The train must, in order to regain its lost time, have been running at a speed of one mile in a minute, and to say that men might not arrive at different conclusions as to whether the appellant was or not negligent, would be to leave all such questions to be decided by the court and not by the jury.
There are but two questions in this case. Did the appellant exercise such care under the circumstances as an ordinarily prudent man would have exercised for his own safety? If not, the verdict should be against him. If he did, then the inquiry arises, did
The care exercised by the appellant and that of negligence imputed to the company are the questions to go to the jury, and the facts in this case will not authorize the court to say, as a matter of law, that either existed. The judgment below should be set aside and a new trial granted. Reversed and remanded for that purpose.
Cleveland R. Co. v. Crawford, 24 Ohio St., 631; Copley v. New Haven, &c., Co., 136 Mass., 6; Tyler v. New York Railroad Co., 137 Mass., 238; Detroit, &c., R. Co. v. Van Steinburg, 17 Mich., 99.