Lee v. Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway Co.

70 N.W. 857, 68 Minn. 49, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 26, 1897
DocketNos. 10,362—(222)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 N.W. 857 (Lee v. Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha 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
Lee v. Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway Co., 70 N.W. 857, 68 Minn. 49, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 339 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

Action to recover for personal injuries received by plaintiff, and for damage done to his property, in a daylight collision, at a street crossing -in the village of Windom, between the locomotive of one of defendant’s passenger trains and plaintiff’s horses and wagon. The plaintiff was driving the horses at the time, and the negligence on the part of the defendant upon which he relies is alleged to have been an omission to sound the whistle or ring the bell of the [50]*50locomotive as the train approached the crossing; that the street was crossed at an improper rate of speed because of its icy condition at that particular time; and also that the engineer was negligent in not stopping the train in time to avert the accident upon discovering that plaintiff was in a perilous position. As the verdict in plaintiff’s favor necessarily included a finding that defendant was negligent in one or more of these particulars, we will consider the claim made by the defendant’s attorney that there was no evidence upon which the jury was justified in declaring that defendant was negligent in any respect.

The train in question was upon its regular time, was approaching from the south, and the track crossed the street at right angles. Defendant’s depot, at which this train always stopped, was about 50 feet from the north of the street. At the time of the collision two or more busses were at the depot and a number of people were upon the platform, nearly all of whom witnessed the affair. Taking up the evidence of plaintiff’s witnesses as to the failure to sound the whistle and ring the bell as the train came up, one Solum testified that he did not hear either whistle or bell. Upon cross-examination he admitted that the whistle might have been sounded at the usual place, about 80 rods south of the depot, near a bridge, and not have been heard by him. And as to the ringing of the bell Solum did not pretend to know anything about it until after the locomotive had crossed the street, and was opposite the depot. Another witness, Thomas, had driven into the village with a load of wheat, and when the locomotive struck the plaintiff’s wagon was waiting for an opportunity to unload at the elevator. He heard the whistle, and also the rumbling of the train itself. He testified that his horses occupied his attention, and also that he did not hear a bell ring. That he did not intend to positively assert that the bell did not ring is manifest from a part of the cross-examination. He was asked: “Now, do you mean, Mr. Thomas, anything more than to say that you didn’t hear this bell ring?” and answered: “I didn’t hear any bell ring, no, sir.” And again: “The bell could have been ringing while you were driving along there and your horses attracting your attention, as they were, and you not have heard it, could it not?” The answer was: “It might, but I was standing still when this thing happened.” Another [51]*51witness, Tollefson, testified that he did not hear a whistle or a bell, but upon further examination it appeared that he was not present when the accident occurred, knew nothing of it until afterwards, nor did he know when the train came in that day.

We have thus stated all of the testimony in behalf of the plaintiff, except such as he gave himself, tending to show that there was any failure to sound the whistle or ring the bell as the train approached the crossing. In his own behalf plaintiff testified that before he came to the top of the hill, and at the top, about 300 feet from the crossing, he both looked and listened for a train, but did not see or hear one. From this point the track was in plain sight for some distance south of the bridge we have mentioned, and the train must have been in the vicinity of the bridge when plaintiff was at the brow of the hill. Taking the rate of speed at which the train was running and the rate at which plaintiff drove down the hill, this must have been about the time the whistle was sounded at the bridge. He also testified that while driving down the hill he took pains to look for a train, and to listen for whistle and bell, but in this immediate connection stated that, “My time was most taken up in taking care of my horses and trying to keep my wagon straight, from going sideways on account of the ice there.” And again, when asked, “Could you see anything of a train, after you had started down hill, in any event?” he answered “No, sir; and I had my time taken up with the team and wagon and show case I had on top” of the load.

For the purpose of showing that the whistle was sounded at or near the bridge, and that the bell was rung before and at the time the train came to the crossing,defendant called a large number of witnesses; the engineer and fireman being among them. Nearly all of these witnesses were persons at and about the depot when the train came in, not in defendant’s employ. All testified positively that the train came up to the crossing at the usual rate of speed, “slowing up” as was necessary in order to stop at the depot, but a few feet distant; and that the bell was rung at intervals from the bridge for several rods before the street was reached, and until the collision occurred; while, as before stated, it was conclusively established that the whistle was sounded, for the station, at the usual place near the bridge. We need not give these witnesses’ version of the manner in which plaintiff drove down the hill and upon the track, for that has no bear[52]*52ing upon the question of defendant’s negligence, and is immaterial, if the latter was not shown to be negligent.

From a careful examination of the evidence relative to the alleged omission to give the requisite signals, we are compelled to hold, taking into consideration the negative character of plaintiff’s proofs; the absence of anything like positive evidence that the signals were not given; the fact that, although plaintiff was near enough to hear the whistle at the bridge, he did not; his admission that he was busily occupied with his team and the load as he descended the hill; the positive and convincing testimony of a large number of disinterested witnesses who were at and about the depot when the train came in that the whistle was sounded and the bell rung; the'location of the crossing with reference to the depot; and the improbability in the assertion that this passenger train was run up to the depot platform without giving the customary warning; — that a finding that there was negligence in this respect was not supported by the evidence.

Another circumstance has some bearing when considering the force and value of the testimony given by plaintiff’s witnesses as to the absence of signals. When this action was brought does not appear from the record, but it was not tried for more than four' years after the accident. Certainly testimony of a negative character, very indefinite and unsatisfactory, as this was, cannot be regarded equally as convincing after such a lapse of time as it would be if given earlier.

Nor do we think that there was any evidence upon which to base a finding that the train crossed this street at an improper rate of speed. While one of plaintiff’s witnesses put the rate of speed at from IS to 25 miles an hour, and another at from 10 to 25, neither claimed that the train was running faster than usual. The fact is admitted that it stopped at the usual place opposite the depot building, and this could not have been done, according to the expert evidence produced by plaintiff himself, if the train had been running anywhere near the maximum rate of speed testified to by these witnesses.

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Related

Sullivan v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.
94 P.2d 651 (Montana Supreme Court, 1939)
Lawson v. Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Co.
219 N.W. 554 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.W. 857, 68 Minn. 49, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-chicago-st-paul-minneapolis-omaha-railway-co-minn-1897.