Brennan v. Pennsylvania Railroad

62 A. 177, 73 N.J.L. 147, 44 Vroom 147, 1905 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 28, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 62 A. 177 (Brennan v. Pennsylvania Railroad) 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
Brennan v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 62 A. 177, 73 N.J.L. 147, 44 Vroom 147, 1905 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 6 (N.J. 1905).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garretson, J.

The plaintiff sued to recover damages to his team of horses, wagon and harness, caused by their being struck by an engine of the defendant company at a highway crossing known as the Six Roads crossing, a short distance west of Rahway.

The jury gave a verdict against the defendant, which it by this rule seeks to set aside.

The action occurred January 17th, 1903, at about 5:30 p. M. It was dark or twilight. The plaintiff’s team was in [148]*148charge of Harry Hunt, his colored driver, who was using it to haul sixty-foot poles from a place called Iioxies across the tracks to Woodbridge.

There were two teams, both belonging to the plaintiff, one in charge of Hunt and the other in charge of James Tierney.

Each team was drawing a wagon on which were two logs sixty feet in length, the front and hind wheels being about forty-five feet apart.

Hunt’s team was in front and Tierney’s was following closely. Both men were familiar with the crossing and had been carting logs over it for a considerable time.

They approached the railroad on Leesville avenue, and the train from which the injury was received was westbound on the first track to be crossed.

About seventy feet from the railroad Leesville avenue runs into St. George’s avenue, which crosses the railroad at right angles.

The plaintiff’s drivers went from Leesville avenue into St. George’s avenue, and then intended to go directly across the railroad.

Hunt, the driver of the injured team, stopped at the junction of Leesville avenue and St. George’s avenue, then started on and continued until his horses were struck on the first railroad track.

From the place where Hunt stopped to the crossing, a distance of seventy feet, there was an unobstructed view of at least a quarter of a mile along the railroad towards Rahway (the direction from which the train in question came), except so far as the flagman’s shanty interfered. The headlight of the engine was lighted.

The shanty adjoins the easterly side of the highway, was six feet from the nearest rail of the track and was six and a half feet in width along the road, so that it would begin to be an obstruction twelve and a half feet from the railroad track, while-from a point seventy feet from the track to a point twelve and a half feet from the track, or for a distance of fifty-seven and a half feet, there was an unobstructed view for a quarter of a mile.

[149]*149It appears from the testimony of Hunt that from the time he started from the place where he had stopped until his team was struck he did not look to see whether any train was approaching.

Hpon his direct examination Hunt says: “The first we saw was the crossing, and-1 stopped right at the curve [this is at the junction of Leesville avenue and St. George’s avenue], and when I stopped the flagman came out and set his light down and went back, and the fellow was behind me, he says: ‘Go ahead, there is no train, for the flagman has set his light down and gone back.’ I says: ‘I don’t know about that; we cannot always depend upon the flagman.’ He says: ‘Well, if there was a train coming he would have to be out there.’ So I started on, and as I got on the track he came out and he says: ‘There is a train coming,’ and to come on across. Well, I went on, and the next thing I knew the light was on me of the engine, and it was ‘zip’ and it was all over.” On cross-examination he testified as follows:

"Q. Where were you when you stopped your horses first; was it at the junction of the roads ?

“A. Just — well, you cannot say about the junction of the roads; the hind part of my wagon was about at the junction; yes, the hind part; yes, right at the curve.

"Q. The point where you stopped, as you said, to look, was where; just as you come from Leesville avenue into St. George’s .avenue ?

“A. Yes, sir.

"Q. Just about the junction of the two roads ?

"A. Yes, sir.

“Q. While you were standing at that point I understood you saw the flagman come out and set down his lamp ?

"Q. And then Jim, who was behind you on the other load, he called out to you to go ahead, that there was no train coming; then you said you did not know about that?

"Q. Then you went on, did you ?

“A: I did; I went on.”

[150]*150He then describes the position of himself with reference to the flagman’s shanty, saying: “As you come on here, when you got to the shanty on the wagon you were right by the shanty and there is- the track.”

“Q. That is when you were sitting on the wagon opposite the shanty the horses are on the track ?

“A. Yes, sir; and the driver is by the shanty; when I reached the shanty he came out and said: ‘Go ahead; a

train is coming,’ or he said, ‘Come on,’ or something of that kind, or ‘Go ahead; a train is coming.’

“Q. That is just when you were sitting on your wagon, just opposite the watchman’s shanty?

"Q. Then he came out and said to you: ‘Go ahead; there is a train coming?’

“A. Yes, sir; and the horse’s head was then about on the first track. .

“Q. When he said that to you, was your wagon standing or was it moving?

“A. We were going along.

“Q. From the time that you stopped up here at the junction of the two roads, you went right on, did you ?

“Q. Where was the train when you first sawr it coming?

“A. Well, I could not tell you; all I seen was the light, and the light was on me then.”

When the plaintiff rested, counsel for the defendant moved for a nonsuit on the ground of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff’s driver in passing over the distance from where he stopped to the track, where there was an uninterrupted view from the stopping place until interrupted by the flagman’s shanty. The trial justice then requested Hunt, the driver, to say how far away from the track the place was where he first stopped, and Hunt then testified it was about thirt}'" or thirty-five feet from the nearest track.

Upon these facts we think the contributory negligence of the plaintiff’s servant is clear. Van Riper v. New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad Co., 42 Vroom 345; Beeg [151]*151v. New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad Co., 41 Id. 56; Conklin v. Erie Railroad Co., 34 Id. 338; Hoops v. West Jersey and Seashore Railroad Co., 36 Id. 89; Dotty v. Atlantic City Railroad Co., 35 Id. 710; Winter v. New York and Long Branch Railroad Co., 37 Id. 677; Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v. Leary, 27 Id. 705; Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co. v. Heffernan, 28 Id. 149; Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v. Righter, 13 Id. 180.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 177, 73 N.J.L. 147, 44 Vroom 147, 1905 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brennan-v-pennsylvania-railroad-nj-1905.