Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Ives

144 U.S. 408, 12 S. Ct. 679, 36 L. Ed. 485, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2086
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 4, 1892
Docket134
StatusPublished
Cited by862 cases

This text of 144 U.S. 408 (Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Ives) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Ives, 144 U.S. 408, 12 S. Ct. 679, 36 L. Ed. 485, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2086 (1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lamar

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action by Albert Ives, Jr., as administrator of the estate of Elijah Smith, deceased, against the Grand Trunk Eailway Company of Canada, a Canadian corporation operating a line of railroad in Michigan, to recover damages for the alleged wrongful and negligent killing of plaintiff’s intestate,without fault on his own part, by the radway company, at a street crossing in the city of Detroit. It was commenced in a state court and was afterwards removed into the Federal court on the ground of diverse citizenship. The action was brought under §§ 8391 and 3392 of Howell’s Annotated Statutes of Michigan, and, as stated in the declaration, was for the benefit of three daughters and one son of the deceased, whose names were given.

*410 There was a trial before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $5000, with interest from the date of the verdict to the time the judgment was entered. The plaintiff offered to remit the interest, but the court refused to allow it to be done. The defendant then sued out this writ of error.

On the trial, the plaintiff, to sustain the issues on his part, offered evidence tending to prove the following facts: Elijah Smith, plaintiff’s intestate, at the time of his death in May, 1881, was about seventy-five years of age, and had been residing on a farm, a few miles out of the city of Detroit, for several years, being engaged in grape culture. It was his custom to make one or more trips to the city every day during that period. In going to the city he travelled eastwardly on a much travelled road, known as the “Holden road,” which, continued into the city, becomes an important and well-known street running east and west. Within the limits of the city the street was crossed obliquely, at a grade, by the defendant’s road and two other parallel roads coming up from the southAvest, which roads, in the language of the defendant’s engineer, curve “ away from a person coming doAvn the Holden road.” At the crossing the Holden road is sixty-five and one-half feet wide. The defendant’s right of way is forty feet Avide, and the right of way of all the parallel railways, at that place is one hundred and sixty feet Avide.

For a considerable distance, at least three hundred feet, along the right side of the road going into the city there were obstructions to a vieAv of the railroad, consisting of á house known as the “ McLaughlin house,” a barn and its attendant outbuildings, an orchard in full bloom, and, about seventy-six feet from the defendant’s track, another house known as the “ LaAvrence house.” Then there were some shrub bushes, or, as described by one witness, some stunted locust trees and a Avillow, a short distance from the line of the right of way. So that, it seems, from all the evidence introduced on this point, it was hot until a traveller was Avithin fifteen or twenty feet, of the track, and then going up the grade, that he could get an unobstructed vieAv of the track to the right. One *411 witness testified that if fie was in a buggy, his horse would be within eight feet of the track before he could get a good view of it in both directions.

On the morning of the fatal accident, Mr. Smith and his wife were driving • down the Holden road into Detroit, in a buggy with the top raised, and with the side curtains either raised or removed. • Opposite the Lawrence house they stopped several minutes, presumably to listen for any trains that might be passing, and while there a train on one of the other roads passed by going out of the city. Soon after it had crossed the road', and while the noise caused by it was still quite distinct, they drove on towards their destination. Just as they had reached the defendant’s track, and while apparently watching the train that had passed, they were struck by one of the defendant’s trains coming from the right at the rate of at least twenty — some of the witnesses say forty — miles an hour, and were thrown into the air, carried some distance, and instantly killed. This train was a transfer train between two junctions, and was not running on any schedule time. The plaintiff’s witnesses agree, substantially, in saying that the whistle was not blown for this crossing nor was the bell rung, and that no signal whatever of the approach of the train was given until it was about to strike the buggy in which Mr. Smith and his wife were riding. The train ran on some four hundred feet or more after striking Mr. Smith before it could be stopped. ( - •

It further appeared that an ordinance of the city of Detroit required railroad trains within its limits to run at a rate not exceeding six miles an hour; and it likewise appeared that there was no flag-man or any one stationed at this crossing to warn travellers of approaching trains.

Most of the witnesses for the defence, consisting, for the main part, of its employes aboard the train at the time of the accident, testified, substantially, that the ordinary signals of blowing the whistle and ringing the bell were given before reaching the crossing, and that, in their opinion, the train was not moving faster than six miles an hour. It must be stated, however, that some of the defendant’s witnesses the brake *412 man, among others, would not' say that the ordinary signals were given, nor would they testify that the train was not moving faster than at the rate prescribed by the city ordinance ; and one of its witnesses, in particular, testified that the train was moving “ about 20 miles an hour, perhaps a little faster.”

A witness called by the plaintiff in rebuttal, an engineer of forty-five years’ standing, who was examined as an expert, testified that if the train ran on after striking Mr. Smith the distance it was said to have gone before it could be stopped,' it must have been going at the rate of twenty-five or thirty miles ah hour; and that if it had been going but six miles an hour, as claimed by the defendant, it could have been stopped in the length of the engine, and even without brakes would not have run more than thirty-five feet, if reversed.

The foregoing embraces the substance of all the evidence set forth in the bill of exceptions on the question of how the fatal accident occurred, and with respect to the alleged negligence of the defendant, in the premises, and also the alleged contributory negligence of Mr. Smith.

At the close of the testimony the defendant submitted in writing a number of requests for instructions to the jury, which, if they had been given, would have virtually taken the case from the jury and would have authorized them to bring in a verdict in its favor. The court refused to give any of them, in the language requested, but gave some of them in a modified form and embraced others in the general charge. The refusal to give the instructions requested was excepted to, and exceptions were also noted to various, portions of the charge as given. As those exceptions are substantially embodied'in the assignment of errors, they will not be further referred to here, but such of them as we deem material will be considered in a subsequent part of this opinion.

The first point raised by the defendant and urgently insisted upon, as being embraced in the assignment of errors, is, that there is no evidence in this record that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
144 U.S. 408, 12 S. Ct. 679, 36 L. Ed. 485, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-trunk-railway-co-v-ives-scotus-1892.