Goodell v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

67 A.D. 271, 73 N.Y.S. 428

This text of 67 A.D. 271 (Goodell v. New York Central & Hudson River 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
Goodell v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 67 A.D. 271, 73 N.Y.S. 428 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinions

Spring, J.:

Glasgow street runs north and south in the village of Clyde. The defendant’s tracks cross it at grade and the ground at the crossing and for some distance each way is nearly level. The four main tracks, numbering from the south, are: No. 1, the main track for east-bound passenger trains; No. 2, for like trains going west; No. 3, the west-bound freight track; and No. 4, for freight trains going east. North of these main tracks are four switch tracks designated in the record as Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 8. No. 5 is immediately north of the main track for freight trains going east and it extends several hundred feet easterly of the crossing uniting with another switch track. The other switch tracks are still north of No. 6. The gauge of the defendant’s track is four, feet eight and one-half inches. The space between the nearest rails of the tracks Nos. 1 and 2 is nine and forty-eight one-liundredths feet; between 2 and 3, seven and twenty-eight one-hundredths feet; between 4 and o, eight and forty-eight one-hundredths feet. From the center of No. 5 to the center of No. 6 [274]*274is fifty-seven feet and the like measurement from No. 6 to No. 7 is forty-two feet. From the north rail of No. 8 track to the south rail of No. 1 track, which includes the entire track space, is one hundred and forty-nine feet; and the distance from the north rail of No. 2 track to the north rail of No. 5 track is thirty-seven and four-tenths feet. All of these measurements are along the center of Glasgow street, which is sixty-six feet in width. The rails of defendant’s tracks at this crossing in the main extend above the adjacent planking, varying from one and three-eighths inches down to nothing. The planking extends along parallel with each track, leaving an open space of three inches between each rail and the planks on each side of it.' The space between the rails of each, track is planked, but intervening the tracks, except for the guard plank, it is filled in with gravel. The tracks of the defendant cross the highway at a right' angle, but there is a slight curve east of the street. The greater part of the village of Clyde lies north of the defendant’s tracks. The Erie canal, .which is also north of the defendant’s road, is crossed by a lift bridge, the easterly end of which is four hundred and nineteen feet from the south rail of track No. 2. Clyde river is south of the defendant’s roadbed, running along parallel with it and distant therefrom at the crossing about seventy-five feet. South of the river are the tracks of the West Shore railroad and immediately south of them is Meadow street, which is. also substantially parallel with the several tracks. Sodus street is four hundred feet west of Glasgow street and parallel with it.

There are several buildings and permanent structures which tend to obscure the view of the traveler going southerly along Glasgow street toward the defendant’s crossing after having passed over the lift bridge across the canal. Immediately east of Glasgow street and contiguous to the canal is a building called Colliers and close to that is Strcetzels which is two hundred and eighty feet north of track No. 2. The prospect toward the east of one in the street is cut off by these buildings. There is a space intervening the Streetzel building and the Wells marble shop building of perhaps thirty feet from which there is an unobstructed view east and that is also so for some feet after passing below the marble shop buildings. Between the tracks 5 and 6 the defendant’s freight house is located, [275]*275and the westerly end of this building is about forty feet from the center line of the traveled part of Glasgow street and twelve and eighteen one-hundredths feet north of the north rail of track No. 5, and fifty-one and ninety-four one-hundredths feet north of the center of track No. 2. Along the entire south side of this freight house there is a platform. These permanent structures do not impede the view of an approaching train from the east for a half a mile for the entire spade of fifty feet north of track No. 2. At the east side of Glasgow street and north of the main track is a freight and switch yard in which are laid two tracks in addition to those already mentioned and they do not cross Glasgow street. Between this street and Sodus street on the west and immediately south of the main track defendant’s station is located. N orth of the main tracks and south of the canal are a grain house, fifty feet high, a coal shed and other buildings which interfere materially with the view to the west of the traveler going south in the street after passing over the canal bridge, and this difficulty was further enhanced on the night of the accident by freight cars scattered along north of these main tracks and south of the canal. The proof tends to show that only occasional glimpses of the tracks west of the crossing could be had on the night of the accident. On this night on the east side of the crossing there were many box freight cars in the yard east of the street and north of the main tracks.' One witness who had walked along the street that evening testified that for a step or two after passing the marble shop buildings he could get a view of the tracks east of the crossing. There are other witnesses, however, who testified that the view east was wholly obstructed. Doherty, a witness sworn on. behalf of the plaintiff, testified that he had passed over the crossing on foot a very few minutes before the accident, and in his narration of the situation said : “ I noticed there were freight cars on track 5 in front of that freight house ; either three or four, I wouldn’t be positive. With reference to the highway, the one next the highway stood, I should think, about six ties from the sidewalk, or I should think ten or twelve feet; of course I don’t know the distance of the ties apart. It was about seven ties. There was a sluiceway there, and the end of the car came up. to that sluiceway. They were box cars. I observed in regard to the freight yard north of the freight house as to whether there [276]*276were cars there or not; there was cars there. I should think there was about fifteen or sixteen. There was one car there that attracted my attention most. It belonged to the bridge builders. It was a flat car with a house built on it. I observed as I came along whether I could see the tracks to the east looking through that freight yard that night. Q. Could you? A. I could not.”

He further testified that these fifteen or twenty cars in the yard “ were mostly all freight cars, box cars.” The witness Meade had been over the crossing going south just before the collision and Was on the bridge over Clyde river when the freight train on track No. 3 came in sight. He was at the time driving two horses hitched to a bobsleigh, and testified: The rails were above the plank and stuck to the runners of the sleigh, froze to the sleigh. I saw this train as it approached that crossing that night; I saw it before it approached the crossing. Q. When you passed over that lift bridge did you make any observations to the east ? A. No, sir; not until I got to the yards, and when I got to the yards I seen no chance to look down the track. When I got to the yards I took an observation to the east that night; to the west, too. Those yards to the east were pretty well full of cars. There was one little place I could see through, maybe two feet, to the east, and there was some cars to the west, but a man could see the engine that stood on 4.”

On the night of the collision there were three or four'freight cars on track No. 5, south of the freight house.

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Bluebook (online)
67 A.D. 271, 73 N.Y.S. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodell-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-nyappdiv-1901.