Cote v. Boston & Maine Railroad

254 A.D. 593, 2 N.Y.S.2d 678

This text of 254 A.D. 593 (Cote v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cote v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 254 A.D. 593, 2 N.Y.S.2d 678 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

(dissenting). Late on the afternoon of Sunday, August 2, 1936, Joseph A. Cote was killed when his Plymouth coupe, which he was driving across the tracks of the Boston and Maine Railroad at Blackinton, Mass., was struck by a freight train. In the car with him, at the time of the accident, were his wife, Hazel Cote, the administratrix here, and their thirteen-year-old daughter Louise, who saved themselves by jumping from the car before it was struck by the train. This action is brought against the railroad for negligence and seeks in a first cause of action damages for the death of the decedent and in a second damages for his conscious pain and suffering. The jury returned a verdict of $6,000 in favor of the plaintiff on the first cause of action and disagreed as to the second. Thereafter, on plaintiff’s motion, an order was made severing the two causes of action and granting the plaintiff judgment against the defendant on the first for the amount of the verdict and costs'. It further provided that the second cause of action remain on the calendar and be tried separately and that the order thus made is without prejudice to the review, upon an appeal from the judgment, of the denial of the defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint made during the trial. The defendant has appealed from both the judgment and order.

The main tracks of the Boston and Maine Railroad through Blackinton run in an easterly and westerly direction. The station is located on the north side of the tracks. Massachusetts avenue, which apparently is one of the principal streets, parallels the railroad tracks some distance to the north and a street leads from Massachusetts avenue southerly to the west side of the station. A dirt road continues in the same direction as the street by a plank crossing maintained by the railroad across the two tracks, down a slight grade between some fence-posts, called on the trial a gate, and thence through some woods to an open field. This field was owned and used by the Barber Leather Company and was also [594]*594permitted by it to be used by a local baseball club, for exhibition games. A grandstand had been erected and games, to which the public was invited and admission charged, were frequently held there during the playing season. At times, while games were in progress, a considerable number of persons crossed and reerossed the railroad tracks in going to and from the games, and a railroad police officer was on occasion stationed at the crossing to direct traffic and warn of approaching trains. Some distance to the west of this crossing was a public crossing known as River street. The west-bound whistling post for the River street crossing was located east of the railroad station, but not eighty rods to the east of it. Plaintiff had used this crossing in attending ball games for seventeen years. On the day of the fatal accident plaintiff’s intestate left the baseball field about five-fifteen p. m., daylight saving time, drove along the dirt road, which he had used on many previous occasions, through the gate, up the grade and onto the tracks. The woods, which obstructed the view of the tracks, ended some distance south of the gate, but there was brush between the woods and track, which also obstructed the view of the tracks until the traveler reached the gate, and possibly for some unestablished distance farther. The plaintiff testified that her husband drove his ear in first gear and then shifted into second gear at the gate. They looked at this point and she saw no train. As they went up the grade she said that she was looking both ways and that the first time she saw the train was when the ear was on the east-bound track. She opened the door and she and her daughter jumped out. The automobile proceeded on to the west-bound track and was struck, with the result that her husband was killed. She said she listened and heard neither whistle nor bell as they were approaching the tracks. There were no warning signs erected at the crossing and no watchman on duty that day. The planking was rather rough and bumpy, the train did not slow up until after it had passed the crossing, and the automobile did not come to a complete stop at any time before it was struck. She saw her husband look up the track to the east when the car was between the fence and the tracks.

A photograph, taken the day after- the accident from a point in the center of the roadway, sixteen feet, seven inches south of the south rail of the east-bound track and thirty-one feet, six inches from the south rail of the west-bound track, shows an unobstructed view of the tracks toward the east for a distance later shown by an engineer to, be 2,542 feet. Another photograph taken from the same point at the same time shows an unobstructed view toward the west along the tracks for 2,300 feet. The train, which contained forty-one freight cars, was running west at about thirty-five miles per hour on the northerly track. There was no whistling- post for the crossing where the accident happened and never had been. The engineer testified that the engine bell was ringing continuously and automatically from a point a mile and a half east of the crossing and that he blew the whistle at the post for the River street crossing- As the whistle blast died out he saw the automobile come up from the road on the south side of the track and it stopped on the track ahead of him when the engine was about 100 feet from the crossing. A witness who was sitting on the steps of the freight house, northwest of the crossing, heard the train approaching, saw the ear come up slowly onto the tracks and stop just before it was struck with the front wheels on the west-bound tracks.

[595]*595Both causes of action are based upon negligence and also upon failure on the part of the defendant to comply with sections 138, 139, 140 and 232 of chapter 160 and section 3 of chapter 229 of the General Laws of Massachusetts. The second cause of action also pleads a statutory basis in section 6 of chapter 229. The answer, in addition to the denial of any negligence on the part of the railroad, alleges contributory negligence, gross and willful negligence and violation of section 15 of chapter 90 of the General Laws of Massachusetts on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate.

A review of the pertinent Massachusetts statutes is necessary. Section 3 of chapter 229 of the General Laws makes a corporation operating a railroad which, by reason of its negligence, causes the death of a person in the exercise of due care liable in damages in the sum of not less than $500, nor more than $10,000, to be assessed according to the degree of culpability and to be recovered in an action of tort. Section 6 of the same chapter provides that in any civil action brought under section 3 damages may be recovered under a separate count for conscious suffering resulting from the same injury.

Section 138 of chapter 160 of the General Laws of that Commonwealth states that every railroad corporation shall cause a bell to be rung or a whistle sounded at the distance of at least eighty rods from the place where the railroad crosses any public way or traveled place at grade at which a signboard is required to be maintained as provided in sections 140 and 141 of the same chapter, and to be rung or sounded continuously or alternately until the engine has crossed such way or traveled place. Section 140 directs every railroad corporation to cause certain signboards to be placed and maintained across each public way where it crosses a railroad at the same level, and section 141 of the same statute provides for signboards at crossings of traveled places where the board of aldermen of a city or the selectmen of a town so request.

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Bluebook (online)
254 A.D. 593, 2 N.Y.S.2d 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cote-v-boston-maine-railroad-nyappdiv-1938.