Atlantic Coast Electric Railroad v. Rennard

42 A. 1041, 62 N.J.L. 773, 33 Vroom 773, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 6, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 A. 1041 (Atlantic Coast Electric Railroad v. Rennard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Coast Electric Railroad v. Rennard, 42 A. 1041, 62 N.J.L. 773, 33 Vroom 773, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 118 (N.J. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nixon, J.

The two cases above stated were by consent of court and counsel tried together at the Monmouth Circuit, the damages claimed in each case resulting from the same accident and all the proofs and admitted facts apply equally to both. Verdict was given and judgment entered in the Circuit for each of the plaintiffs and afterwards affirmed by the Supreme Court. By this writ these judgments are brought here for review.

The plaintiff in error operates an electric railway between Asbury Park and Pleasure Bay, in Monmouth county, and the defendant in error, John Rennard, was the driver of an omnibus owned by Joel Wilson, the other defendant, running between Asbury Park and the Deal Lake water-chutes. The route of the stage or omnibus crossed the track of the electric road a short distance outside of the limits of Asbury Park, and at this place the collision occurred which led to these suits; Rennard claiming damages for personal injuries, and Wilson for losses sustained by the demolition of his stage and the killing of one of his horses and rendering the other useless.

The errors assigned are twenty-two in number, but it will not be necessary to deal with each separately, as several of them in repeated instances relate to the same subject.

Exception was taken to the refusal of the trial judge to nonsuit the plaintiff at the close of his evidence. At that stage of the case the evidence showed that the road crossing the track of the electric railway was used by the public at large in going from Deal Beach to Interlaken station, and that the plaintiff, Rennard, crossed at this place seven or eight times a day. Three witnesses had testified that at the time of the accident the car was running at the rate of eight [775]*775or ten miles an hour, and three other witnesses had sworn that they heard no gong rung by the motorman of the car. It was also shown that the car ran from forty to sixty feet after striking the omnibus, thus confirming the proof as to the great speed of the car. The injuries received by the plaintiff had been proved, and also the destruction of the stage and loss of the horses owned by Wilson. The only ground for the motion to nonsuit, therefore, rested upon the alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff in attempting to cross the track of the railway in front of an approaching car. The plaintiff did not deny doing this, thinking, as he said, that he could cross before the car reached that point. The question of plaintiff’s negligence was by the refusal of this motion left to the jury, and we think upon a careful examination of the facts of this case that this was not error.

In the case of Orange and Newark Horse Car Railroad Co. v. Ward, 18 Vroom 560, the learned judge delivering the opinion of the court, said: “Both vehicles were in motion towards each other when the plaintiff saw the car. The plaintiff decided to urge on the horses as the safer means of escape. The contributory negligence charged is that he drove on instead of turning from the track. Now, whether the safer and more prudent course of the plaintiff to pursue was to attempt getting off the track or to quicken his speed and pass before the car reached him, were questions of fact to be settled upon the evidence and by the jury. I think it quite obvious that the judge could not have determined legally that one course or the other was demanded of the plaintiff in the exercise of proper care, or that driving on under existing exigencies was legal negligence.”

And in Consolidated Traction Co. v. Lambertson, 30 Vroom 297, the court said: “He who puts himself in the way of runaway horses that have escaped from the driver’s control must know that he is taking a risk. But a jury may well say that he who crosses in front of a trolley car provided with a motorman may assume that it is furnished with the means of stopping or reducing speed. Then there was a question [776]*776for the jury in this case whether a prudent man, upon such an assumption, might not judge it safe to cross in front of a trolley car three hundred feet away, although coming at great and illegal speed. Upon the assumption of the existence of means to reduce speed and to stop, and of a servant employed to make use of such means, it would be absurd to say that one was bound to refrain from crossing for fear the servant would not make use of the means.” There are no facts in this case which exempt it from the application of the foregoing rules.

In holding that the motion to nonsuit on the ground of contributory negligence in attempting to cross in front of the approaching trolley car was properly denied, several exceptions to the refusal of the judge to charge to the effect that if the driver of the stage saw the car coming at great speed while he was yet in a safe place and then urged on his horses in an attempt to cross the track, he cannot recover, are at the same time disposed of.

Six of the assignments of error are exceptions to refusals of the judge to charge the jury that “if they believe” certain facts which it is assumed have been proved, then “the plaintiff cannot recover,” or in other words, was guilty of contributory negligence. The quoted words are the beginning and ending of each request.

In Traction Co. v. Chenowith, 29 Vroom 416, the late Chief Justice Beasley held that “how far the judge will apply the legal rules to the facts is a matter of discretion,” and in disposing of a refusal to charge certain requests, said: “ From this narration it is apparent that the trial judge was asked to tell the jury what inferences were to be drawn from certain facts if they found such facts to exist. No appeal was made to him to propound any legal principle; all that he was to do was to declare that, postulating a certain condition of affairs, it was demonstrated that the plaintiff was, in whole or in part, the-cause of his own injury. But how could the judge assert that súch was the necessary conclusion from the facts assumed ? Simply because all men of common sense must [777]*777draw such inference from such premises. This being so, then there is, obviously, not the least ground for the theory that it was a judicial duty to express an opinion on the point, and this for the reason that the function in question was one that strictly belonged to the jury, and in the performance of which it is scarcely conceivable they could make a mistake.” No language could more aptly express the reasons why the last-mentioned six exceptions cannot be sustained.

Exception was taken and allowed to the following part of the charge of the judge, to wit: “The trolley car and stage were both approaching-the same point, and the driver of each had a right to propel his vehicle across the path on which the other was coming, but in the exercise of his right each of those persons, Rennard, the driver of the stage, and Grant, the driver of the trolley car, was bound to exercise reasonable care for his own safety and also for the safety of the other party; each was bound to exercise reasonable care to keep out of danger himself and not put the other party in danger either.” There was no error in that part of the charge, and it is a very clear and concise statement of the law of this state relating to the rights and duties of those in control of vehicles and electric cars at crossings. Traction Co. v. Chenowith, supra; Traction Co. v. Lambertson, supra; Traction Co. v. Scott, 29 Vroom 682.

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Zindler v. Public Service Railway Co.
74 A. 478 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
42 A. 1041, 62 N.J.L. 773, 33 Vroom 773, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-coast-electric-railroad-v-rennard-nj-1899.