Lang v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

136 N.W. 297, 118 Minn. 68, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 542
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 31, 1912
DocketNos. 17,583—(122)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 136 N.W. 297 (Lang v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lang v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 136 N.W. 297, 118 Minn. 68, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 542 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Holt, T.

The action is for damages for injuries received in a collision at a railway crossing. Plaintiff had a verdict. The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and if that was denied, then that it have a new trial. The motion was denied in toto, and defendant appeals.

Eighth street, a much traveled thoroughfare, in the city of Moor-head, runs north and south. Three tracks of the defendant railway cross at right angles. The street is paved at the crossing and sidewalk on both sides. The depot of the defendant is located on the west side of Eighth street. Four safety gates operated from a tower protect the crossing. The two north gates, when closed, are six feet north of the most northerly rail of these tracks. Each gate folds like a pair of shears and has one long and one short arm, which, when closed, fall down;, the short arm extending over the sidewalk, and the long arm extending over and to the center of the street, where it meets the long arm from the gate on the other side of the street. When so closed, these arms are about four feet from the ground.

At about four p. m. on March 9, 1910, a bright and clear day, plaintiff came walking south on the easterly sidewalk .of Eighth [70]*70street, and some twenty-five feet from the most northerly track of the defendant he stopped to read some notice posted on a fence. After so doing, he claims that he looked both east and west and started to cross the track. He claims he saw no train from the east, but saw a switch engine pulling a string of cars on the south main track approach the. crossing so that he did not have time to cross ahead of it. He stopped about two feet north of the north rail of the nor the track, being the main west-bound track, to let the switch train pass by. As he was so standing, the smoke came down so heavy as the locomotive proceeded east that he could not see in that direction. He waited maybe thirty seconds or more, then walked south, and had crossed the west-bound track, but was not sufficiently far over to clear the pilot beam of a fast passenger train then coming-in from the east, so that he was struck and thrown several feet out in the street and toward the cars of the switch train. It is the claim and contention of plaintiff that, as the switch train was pulling across Eighth street, the safety gates were open, thus giving plaintiff assurance that no other train was approaching, so that he had a right to rely thereon, especially since he, because of the smoke, was unable to see the oncoming passenger train.

The defendant contends that the case presents a situation where plaintiff's contributory negligence conclusively appears. Often has the law been announced that railroad crossings are of such impending great danger that one about to cross may not wholly rely on the invitation of flagmen or open gates to do so, but must use his senses to ascertain for himself the approach of trains. However, open gates are a matter to consider in determining the question of contributory negligence; for the pedestrian has a right to assume that the position of these is for the purpose of indicating to him presence or absence of danger, and also that the gateman perched in a tower is in a better position to notice approaching trains than is the pedestrian. But we have here this situation: That as to the switch train then pulling in upon the crossing plaintiff knew that the gateman failed to close the gate; that being so, the plaintiff had little, if any, right to rely on the open gates as an invitation to cross. Nor can it be said that he was lured-into danger when the [71]*71switch engine with a string of cars attached was then effectually blocking the crossing. Plaintiff .himself is forced to concede that he thought little of the position of the gates at the time, but looked for danger. He then assumed a position within a foot or two of the north rail of the west-bound track. There the smoke of the passing switch engine so enveloped him and his view to the east that he states he could not discover an approaching train by sight. He waited some thirty seconds or more, he states, but did not give the switch.train time to pass. Then, without being yet able to look to the east on account of the smoke, he started across the track and was struck.

It is plain that had there been no gates or watchman, and had plaintiff then attempted to cross in the manner and under the condition existing as stated by him, he would have been guilty of contributory negligence under all the decisions, unless it may be said that the information obtained when he looked east before the smoke obscured his view was such that the ordinarily prudent person might have considered it safe to venture on the tracks.

May it be said that the open gates lured him on ? We think not, for at no time upon the approach of the switch train, according to plaintiff’s version, were they closed.

In the case of Flygen v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co. 115 Minn. 197, 132 N. W. 10, the ordinance required the defendant to keep a gateman till midnight at a place where five tracks cross a street at an angle of about forty-five degrees. At ten o’clock in the evening-plaintiff, in starting to cross, found the gates open and proceeded across. When he had crossed two or three tracks, he noticed the light of a train coming from the south. He stopped to let it pass, then went on, and was struck by a train which in the meantime had come up from the north and was hidden from view by the train just passing him. It was there held that it was a question for the jury whether he acted with ordinary care. We notice that, when Flygen started to cross, he saw no train approaching the crossing. The open gates were an indication to him that none was coming, but the situation was changed after he had partly crossed the tracks. Defendant’s negligence placed him in a position of danger. In the [72]*72instant case plaintiff saw and knew that the crossing was occupied, and instead of waiting till the switch train pulled across, he leaves a safe place for a position of danger, aware that the smoke prevents him from seeing the approach of a train from the east.

In the case of Woehrle v. Minnesota Transfer Ry. Co. 82 Minn. 165, 84 N. W. 791, 52 L.R.A. 848, the Chief Justice states: “In such cases the raised gates or the absence of the flagman is an assurance to the traveler of safety, and an implied invitation to make the crossing, upon which he may to some extent, but not entirely, rely, and presume that it is safe for him to do so, and act upon the presumption, within' reasonable limits.”

Woehrle knew that a flagman was on the crossing when trains were approaching. The absence of such flagman lured him into danger. In the case of Stegner v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co. 94 Minn. 166, 102 N. W. 205, Stegner was notified that the crossing, consisting of five tracks, was clear by the gates with the signal light on being up. The night was dark. When he had crossed some of the tracks, a train came suddenly in sight from the south; he stopped to let it pass; while so standing, his attention evidently directed to the passing train, an engine with the tender ahead and no light on backed down upon him. The facts are clearly different from the present case as to contributory negligence. It is not reasonable to say that the position of the gates in the present case either lured the plaintiff on, or could in any way be considered by him as an assurance that no trains from the east were approaching, because a train was then and there occupying the crossing.

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Related

Anton v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.
214 N.W. 661 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1927)
Olin v. Minnesota Transfer Railway Co.
205 N.W. 440 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)
Buelow v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
204 N.W. 571 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)
Engstrom v. Canadian Northern Railway Co.
189 N.W. 580 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1922)
Haugen v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.
155 N.W. 1058 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1916)
Campbell v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.
141 N.W. 855 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
136 N.W. 297, 118 Minn. 68, 1912 Minn. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lang-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-minn-1912.