Bursiel v. Boston & Maine Railroad

134 A. 40, 82 N.H. 363, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 134 A. 40 (Bursiel v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bursiel v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 134 A. 40, 82 N.H. 363, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 35 (N.H. 1926).

Opinion

Snow, J.

The defendant’s motion for a nonsuit should have been granted.

The plaintiff was forty-six years of age. There is no evidence that he was not endowed with average intelligence and possessed of all his senses.

For ten years he had been coming to this station to get milk off the trains, “any time from half past seven in the morning until five o’clock at night.” He must have had some conception of the frequency with which the main and only tracks through the city at this point were in use. The plaintiff knew all the conditions that impeded his view or interfered with his hearing approaching trains; namely, that it was snowing, that it was just about daybreak and that the freight train was passing. If he could see only a limited distance up the track because of snow and darkness, or could hear less distinctly because of the passing freight, reasonable care required greater precaution.

The fact that a pedestrian has nothing to control except his own locomotion is a distinguishing circumstance of material importance on the issue of contributory negligence. Olsen v. Railroad, ante, 120. The plaintiff was burdened only with four empty cans and was impelled by no haste. He was the only person upon the platform west of the easterly track. He selected a place for crossing the track at a point where the space between the rails had not been filled and was undesigned for passage. It must be found that the ordinary man, in the situation of the plaintiff, with his back turned *366 to a possibly approaching train from the north, would not have walked twenty-five feet diagonally down between the rails of the unfilled track without looking again, unless for some reason “he had reasonable ground for believing, and did believe, that no train would pass'over the track” at that time. Bourassa v. Railway, 75 N. H. 359, 360. The evidence supports neither the existence of, nor a reasonable basis for, such a belief.

To bring himself within the principles laid down in Bourassa v. Railway, supra, Minot v. Railroad, 73 N. H. 317, and Piper v. Railroad, 75 N. H. 228, the plaintiff sets up in argument (1) a speed of the train in excess of the speed at which he had sometimes observed trains enter the station, and his reliance upon the latter, and (2) a custom of the railroad not to permit a train to enter a station when another train was moving out, and his reliance thereon.

The only evidence bearing on the speed of entering trains was the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness Lyons that this train came in at Granite street at twenty to twenty-five miles per hour; the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness Fisher that it came in at fifteen to twenty miles per hour; the engineer’s statements that his train crossed Granite street at ten miles per hour, that it was a bad morning, and that “as a general thing” he “came over that crossing slow anyway”; and the plaintiff’s testimony that he had seen trains draw in there from the north “around ten or fifteen miles an hour.”

Unless this evidence can be so construed, there was no evidence that twenty-five miles an hour was an unusual or an unreasonable rate of speed for a train to enter the station at Granite street. The train was a through train running from Newport, Vermont, to Boston. There were ten cars on the train, which was drawn by a large engine of the Pacific type. The train was presumably to make the station stop, with the passenger coaches in front of the station, and therefore had several hundred feet to go after the engine crossed the street before it would come to a stop. The street was protected by gates. It certainly cannot be presumed on this evidence that twenty-five miles an hour would be regarded by the average person as an excessive speed for the engine to pass Granite street.

If, however, on the evidence, the speed could be found to be unreasonable, there was no evidence that the plaintiff was relying upon the train approaching at a lower rate. The plaintiff claimed no knowledge of the customary speed or movements of this train, or of trains running on a similar schedule. His only reference to its speed in *367 relation to his movement was that, if it had approached at ten to fifteen miles per hour, he would have had “plenty of time”; that is, plenty of time to have leisurely (three miles per hour) walked diagonally down the track twenty-five feet, plus such further distance as he would have had to travel to reach a place of safety. His conduct under such conditions in turning his back to a possibly oncoming train while he slowly walked down the track established his negligence in the absence of some excusing circumstance. Such conduct is not itself evidence of reliance upon a slow speed of the train. The mere fact that the plaintiff had seen trains come in at ten to fifteen miles per hour did not justify a belief, nor furnish evidence of a reliance upon a belief, that no trains would ever come in at a higher rate of speed.

In proof of a custom of the railroad to refrain from entering a station by train while another train is pulling out the plaintiff offered his own testimony that, during the ten years that he had been coming to the station to get milk off the trains, he had never seen two trains come into the station in opposite directions at the same time, nor two trains in motion in the station at once, although he had seen two passenger trains stop there at the same time. He produced another witness, Lyons, who had been at the station “off and on” for ten or twelve years and who stated that he never saw two trains “coming in together at the same time” and had seen trains wait outside while others pulled in.

It is claimed that this custom was supported by the engineer’s testimony that he had the right of way; that it was not the practice to allow a freight to enter the station when a passenger train was expected to stop; that if he had been on time the freight would not have been there; that therefore he slowed down so as to give it a chance to get by before he made his station stop; but that if a passenger train bound north had been standing in the station, he would not have come in without a motion. While the engineer admitted that the movements which were made here seldom occurred, he stated that it was liable to happen any time and that he knew of no reason why it should not happen. The only custom which the engineer’s testimony supports was the practice of avoiding moving trains at stations at times when passengers might be entering or alighting from other trains. His evidence, therefore, tends to disprove rather than to prove the existence of the custom set up by the plaintiff.

But the issue here is not the existence of the alleged custom. We *368 are here considering the question of the plaintiff’s, and not the defendant’s, negligence. The subsidiary issue now under consideration is whether or not the knowledge the plaintiff had afforded him such a reasonable ground for belief in the existence of the custom that he could reasonably rely upon its protection while walking from the point of observation to the point of collision with his back turned in the direction from which, except for the custom, he must have known a train might be approaching.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 40, 82 N.H. 363, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bursiel-v-boston-maine-railroad-nh-1926.