Berry v. Harbor Springs Railway Co.

138 N.W. 1038, 173 Mich. 181, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 996
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
DocketDocket No. 49
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 138 N.W. 1038 (Berry v. Harbor Springs Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry v. Harbor Springs Railway Co., 138 N.W. 1038, 173 Mich. 181, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 996 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

McAlvay, J.

This is an action on the case brought by plaintiff against defendant to recover damages for personal injuries to plaintiff, claimed to have been caused by the negligence of defendant’s servants. A verdict was rendered in the case in favor of plaintiff. From a judgment entered upon such verdict defendant has brought the case before this court upon a writ of error, asking a reversal on account of errors, which are assigned. As far as may be necessary in the consideration of this ease to state any facts, the court will accept the statement as made in the brief of the appellant, for the reason that the appellee has ignored Rule No. 40 (68 N. W. viii) of this court, and not pointed out in a single instance wherein if is claimed the appellant’s statement is incorrect, and has made a new statement of great length.

The injury to the plaintiff occurred in the village of Harbor Springs, Emmet county, where defendant owns and operates a narrow-gauge logging road, which crosses the tracks of the Grand Rapids & Indiana and Bay street at right angles. On defendant’s main track two switches are placed to connect with side tracks, one north of the Grand Rapids & Indiana tracks and one south of those tracks. These switches are operated from a small target house. The north switch is about 120 feet north of this operating station.

On the day of the injury, plaintiff approached defendant’s main tracks from the east, and saw an engine pushing a car of coal ahead of it approaching from the south, the engine heading north. Plaintiff stepped on the east side of the defendant’s track, and waited for this engine [183]*183and car to pass going north. . While waiting she saw a naan, supposed by her to be in the employ of the defendant, in this target house. She knew what the target house was used for, and understood he was there for the purpose of turning the switch on defendant’s track. She knew that the north switch could be operated from there, and knew of no other switch to the north that could be so operated. She was familiar with the location of the main line and the switch tracks of defendant’s road, having often walked on both. After the engine and car of coal had passed plaintiff, she continued on west in the path and on the north side of what is known as Bay street. Defendant’s switch track, from the north switch stand, above mentioned, curves in a southwesterly direction, and as it approaches Bay street curving to the westward it straightens out and runs parallel with such street. This curve, which starts at defendant’s north switch stand, ends where this switch track meets the path at Bay street, and is about 175 feet in length. This engine and car continued on its course up the track far enough to permit the switch to be thrown by the man in the operating station, and let them in on this curved track. This he did, and then went across to the switch track to meet the engine and car, upon which he ácted as a brakeman, to cut the car off for the lower switch. When the switch was thrown, the engine backed in on the switch track, pulling the car of coal. This was a small, light engine of low gear, and adapted to climbing grades. The track was slightly downgrade, and, as soon as it got onto the switch track with a car of coal, the steam was cut off, and it coasted slowly down the hill, with the tender first, at a speed estimated as 2f to 4 miles per hour. It was intended to place the car of coal further down by cutting it off, and making what is known asa “ flying switch.” The grade on the switch track as it descends from the north switch stand is 2.3 per cent., for a short distance, then two per cent., then on a level at a point where this track comes in north of Bay street, and [184]*184continues along parallel with it to the place where the injury occurred.

Plaintiff, continuing on the path as described, came to and passed the point where this switch track approaches Bay street, and proceeded along said path to the place where she was injured, which she designates as exactly opposite the south switch. As she was coming towards the point where the switch track parallels Bay street, some piles of railroad ties obstructed her view of this switch track higher up. She could see some distance up the track where it straightens out, and says that at that point she looked and saw nothing approaching. She continued along her way to the place where the path comes to the side of the switch track on Bay street, and proceeded along such path without any further observation. The engineer on the approaching engine saw plaintiff when she came into view at the end of the pile of railroad ties. The brakeman on the engine also saw her at the same time. The engineer was standing up in his cab watching her from that time until the accident, with nothing to obstruct his view, with one hand on the air brake lever, and ringing the bell continuously with the other hand; the air pump making a noise which could be heard 35 or 40 rods. She walked the whole distance with her back to the engine approaching her from behind along, or near, the path on the side of the track toward Bay street, which is open and level for the whole distance it is paralleled by the track, without turning or looking back. The record shows that she did not walk in the path all of the time, but zigzagged as she went along toward the street and toward the railroad track. The engineer had the engine under control, and at one time applied the brakes because he thought plaintiff was getting too near the track. She proceeded in this manner for a distance of about 10'0 feet from the place where, as stated, she looked up the track as she approached it, when, as is claimed by the men on the engine, she suddenly stepped between the rails, the engine being then ten feet from her, [185]*185and, although the engineer applied his air brakes, reversed his engine and pulled the throttle wide open, and the engine was stopped within that distance, she was struck, and her ankle was injured. No part of her person went under the tender, or was crushed by it. Her testimony is that she was walking in the path, and did not step over the rail onto the track. She gives as her reason why she did not walk farther away from the track that the street was dusty. Plaintiff claimed that her attention was distracted by a train which passed, going west, on the Grand Rapids & Indiana tracks, about. 80 feet away from defendant’s road, before she was struck. All the other witnesses testify that no such train passed until five minutes or more after she was hurt. The plaintiff testified that she was familiar with all these surroundings, and knew that trains were operated on these tracks; that she did not look behind her for the whole distance after she made the first observation until she was injured. The record shows that this was for a distance of about 100 feet, the greater part of which was traversed by her parallel with the railroad track. It appears without dispute from the record and the exhibits in the case that this path parallel with the railroad track was a well-defined and beaten path, at a sufficient distance from the tracks to be without danger of injury from a passing engine, and also that on this side south from the track the way for the entire distance was smooth and unobstructed for a width sufficient for teams to pass each other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 N.W. 1038, 173 Mich. 181, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-harbor-springs-railway-co-mich-1912.