Hummer v. Lehigh Valley Railroad

75 N.J.L. 703, 46 Vroom 703
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 N.J.L. 703 (Hummer v. Lehigh Valley 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
Hummer v. Lehigh Valley Railroad, 75 N.J.L. 703, 46 Vroom 703 (N.J. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the .court was delivered by

Dill, J.

The writ of error in this case-brings up for review a judgment of the Supreme Court, affirming a judgment against the railroad company for damage to a wagon by a freight train on a grade crossing at Linden avenue, in Jersey City.

The question here is whether the trial judge erred in submitting the case to the jury on two questions — first, was the company negligent because the engineer did not stop the train as soon as he reasonably might have stopped it after being warned? and second, was there contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff?

We think that the company was not negligent, and hence do not consider the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence.

At three o’clock in the morning of November 7th, 1905, the plaintiff, a milkman, on his regular route was coming from the northwest on Linden avenue, approaching, at an acute angle, the double-track grade crossing of the Lehigh Valley railroad. The night was very dark and thick, and it [705]*705was impossible to see fox any distance. There were no lights at or about the crossing.

Linden avenue is an unfrequented dirt lane in the outskirts of Jersey City, a single driveway twelve or fourteen feet wide, while the planked railroad crossing is thirty-four feet wide. The crossing is at a sharply acute angle.

Before the plaintiff reached the crossing he got off the road, and, to use his language: “I think I rather got to the railroad really before I thought I was there, because it all looked alike; it was so dark.” He drove on the crossing with the wheels on the left-hand or easterly side off the planking. He endeavored to continue his way across the rails, in the direction in which he was headed, on to the planking, but his horse failed to pull the loaded milk wagon over the rails. He backed and attempted to turn between the tracks back in the direction from which he had come. In so doing the rear wheel on the left-hand side of the wagon became wedged in between the planking and the outer rail of the westbound track.

The plaintiff at this juncture remembered that the regular milk train from the east, going west, was due, and, as he says, not knowing whether the train, had gone or not, he started to unload the milk from the wagon to lighten the load and release the wheel. He spent some two minutes unloading, and while thus engaged looked up and saw the headlight on the engine of the approaching train coming around the Chapel avenue curve, opposite the icehouses, about six hundred feet from the Linden avenue crossing. He says that he did not then have time to get the wagon out of the way, but only to get out of the way himself. He picked up his lantern and ran up the track to signal the oncoming train, which passed him approximately one hundred and fifty feet from the crossing.

The train was brought almost to a standstill before it reached the crossing, and the pilot of the engine was on the crossing but a few feet when the train stopped. Kevertheless, it struck the left-hand rear wheel of the wagon.

[706]*706Tlie plaintiff says that, from the time he saw the headlight of the engine until the collision occurred, less than a minute intervened.

This was the plaintiff’s case.

There was no evidence of any specific omission on the part of the train employes to do anything which could reasonably have been done to have brought the train sooner to a standstill. Uo evidence was offered that the train, under the existing conditions, could have been sooner stopped.

The defendant moved for a nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff had simply ■ proved that an accident occurred, but that he failed to prove that it was through any fault of the defendant. This motion was denied, and, we think, erroneously.

“Where the evidence is equally consistent with either view, with the existence or non-existence of negligence, it is not competent to the judge to leave the matter to the jury. The party who affirms negligence had altogether failed to establish it. That is a rule which ought never to be lost sight of.” Cotton v. Wood, 8 C. B. (N. S.) 568 (at p. 572).

The plaintiff’s case derived no additional strength either from the defence or the evidence in rebuttal.

For the defence, by exhibits — scale map and photograph— and by testimony, it appeared that this train from Jersey City, going west, passed under Chapel avenue overhead bridge, one thousand five hundred feet from Linden avenue. For seven hundred and fifty feet thereafter the track ran in a straight line. Then came the Chapel avenue curve, about two hundred and fifty feet long. The icehouses, opposite which the plaintiff first saw the engine headlight, are on this Chapel avenue curve, somewhat less than six hundred feet from the Linden avenue crossing.

The westerly end of this Chapel avenue curve is about five hundred feet from the Linden avenue crossing, and from this point the track is straight for two hundred and fifty feet to the Linden avenue curve, about one hundred feet long, the westerly end of which is one hundred and fifty feet, in an oblique line, from the crossing where the accident occurred.

[707]*707On the curve nearest Chapel avenue the fireman, from his side of the cab, could see the Linden avenue crossing, but the engineer could not, while on the curve nearest Linden avenue the engineer, but not the fireman, could see the crossing.

The defendant proved that the planking at the crossing was in good order and was thirty-four feet wide.

The train was long and heavy, made up of sixteen cars, mail, express and milk cars, going west on the main westbound track. It was equipped with air-brakes. It was running on schedule time and at its regular speed, twenty-five miles an hour. The night was very dark, and, as the witnesses said, thick and misty, and the ground wet, although it was not raining. At the Linden avenue crossing there was, as a rule, little or no traffic.

When the train was well along on the Chapel avenue curve, having just passed the icehouses, between five hundred and six hundred feet from the Linden avenue crossing, the fireman saw a white light down the track. That the fireman saw this light just after the engine passed the icehouses, where the plaintiff first saw the headlight, demonstrates that the fireman was on the alert and caught the signal as soon as given.

The fireman at once called to the engineer to “see what that man on the track with the lantern wanted.” The engineer, although he could not see the lantern at this point on the curve, immediately, as both the fireman and the engineer, testified, shut off the steam and put on the air-brake. On the straight stretch, some one hundred feet further, the engineer saw a white lantern waved on the track. As he came around the short Linden avenue curve, about one hundred and fifty feet from the place of the accident, he passed the plaintiff, by the side of the track, waving the lantern. He then had the steam off and the air-brake on.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.J.L. 703, 46 Vroom 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummer-v-lehigh-valley-railroad-nj-1907.