Leiby v. Pennsylvania R.

58 F.2d 970, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4815
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1932
DocketNo. 348
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 970 (Leiby v. Pennsylvania R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leiby v. Pennsylvania R., 58 F.2d 970, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4815 (2d Cir. 1932).

Opinions

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought by Myrtle E. Leiby, as administratrix ad prosequendum of her husband, Raymond A. Leiby, deceased, under the statutes of New Jersey to recover damages for his death, sustained through the negligence of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The decedent was driving an automobile which was struck at Titusville, N. J., by one of defendant’s passenger trains, bound from Philadelphia to Stroudsburg, and running at a speed of fifty or sixty miles an hour. The car was struck at a railroad crossing. Upon conflicting testimony, the court left it to the jury to determine whether [971]*971or not the crossing was a part of a public highway and, in our opinion, plaintiff’s evi- , dence was sufficient to justify the finding that it was.

There was evidence that the engineer, while approaching the crossing, negleeted to blow a whistle or ring a bell, as required by the New Jersey statute. This failure to give the statutory warning was proof of negligence on the part of the railroad. Kavanagh v. New York, O. & W. R. Co., 196 App. Div. 384, 187 N. Y. S. 859, affirmed 233 N. Y. 597, 135 N. E. 933. The court submitted to the jury the question whether the failure of the defendant to comply with the statutory signals proximately contributed to the death of the plaintiff’s husband, and, in view of the verdict, we must assume that such was the case. The only question for our consideration is whether the evidence showed contributory negligence on the part of the decedent which would bar plaintiff’s recovery. We think it did.

The accident happened on November 12, 1928, shortly after 5 o’clock in the afternoon. The decedent was alone in his car and drove westerly along the crossing right into the train, which was approaching from the south at right angles to the crossroad. There can be no question that such conduct under ordinary circumstances would be negligent. In clear weather, a person coming along the crossroad toward the railroad track would, for a distance of eighty or ninety feet, have an unobstructed view of the track in a southerly direction extending more than a quarter of a mile. There could be no excuse for failing to see a train coming from the south in time to avoid a collision, unless mist or fog so interfered with visibility as to prevent observation. The plaintiff argues that credible evidence justified the jury in finding that at the time of the collision there was so dense a fog that the decedent could not see the approaching engine in time to avoid it and that he was accordingly not guilty of contributory negligence in driving on the railroad track when he had not been warned of the train by the prescribed statutory signals. The correctness of this conclusion depends mainly on the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness Catherine Swift. In approaching the railroad the decedent was bound to stop and look before crossing. If visibility was poor, he was required to be all the more alert and cautious before going on the track.

Plaintiff called Catherine Swift to show not only that visibility was poor, but that the decedent stopped and looked as much as he should have done under the circumstances. She testified that on the evening of the accident she came with her three children, aged 9, 7% and 6 years, respectively, into the crossroad on the west side of the track, crossed the track and reached a bridge which formed a part of the crossroad and passed over a canal that ran parallel to the railroad and easterly of its right of way. This bridge was twelve feet wide and sixty-four feet long, and its westerly end was nineteen feet eastwardly from the track. When she reached the westerly end of the bridge, moving east, she saw the lights of an automobile about ninety feet away as it turned into the crossroad moving west and toward the bridge. It stopped twenty feet from the westerly end of the bridge. She and her children moved up to it and discovered the decedent sitting in the car, which had both windows open, and looking toward the south. She said that she also looked toward the south and heard and saw nothing approaching from that direction up the track. She then went on with her children, still looking south, until she reached the easterly end of the bridge, which was about forty feet from decedent’s automobile. At that point she looked back and saw the tail-light of the car moving westwardly along the bridge in the direction of the railroad tracks. She then proceeded easterly from the bridge about thirty-eight feet, rounded the corner of Cooper’s store, and got five feet past the entrance, covering a distance of about forty-three feet altogether, when she heard a crash. Shortly after this she looked over toward the railroad (a distance of one hundred and eight feet, which she herself estimated at about one hundred feet), and saw sparks along the track caused by the grinding of the emergency brakes, as the train was being slowed down.

The decedent’s body was found in the canal just to the north of the bridge, and his car was found between the track and the canal, not over twenty-one feet to the north of the bridge.

According to Mrs. Swift’s testimony, there was a fog, and along the canal, where she said it was thickest, an unlighted object could not be seen more than fifty or sixty feet, yet as she stood at the westerly end of the bridge she had seen the headlights of decedent’s car as it turned into the crossroad ninety feet away and she had seen the sparks from the grinding of the brakes at a distance of one hundred and eight feet. Plaintiff’s witnesses William and Marvin Jones, who also said that the night was misty [972]*972and that there was a fog along the canal, each estimated that they saw the headlights of automobiles two hundred feet away. Indeed, the former saw the automobile of deeedent at a distance established by actual measurement to have been two hundred and sixty-eight feet (folio 780), and the latter is the only witness who attempted to limit the visibility of the lights of an automobile at less than three hundred feet (folio 742). But such a powerful headlight as that of the locomotive of defendant’s train unquestionably could have been seen several times farther (folio 1395).. Mrs. Swift’s testimony that she did not see the headlight of the locomotive while she was proceeding along the bridge to the easterly end may be explained by the fact that she was above the water where she had said the fog was thicker and the visibility considerably less than over by the railroad tracks. Moreover, she had no reason to look with any care for a train that was then a long distance off, and she was incumbered at the time by her three small children and an umbrella which she was carrying on account of the rain (folio 200). Such testimony was purely negative, and under the circumstances should be disregarded in view of affirmative testimony that the headlight was burning brightly and could be seen a long distance. Except when at the very east end of the bridge it was so long a time before the collision that the train was very far away. She .certainly was not in a position where she was likely to see the light, nor had she any reason to give an oncoming train any real attention. Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Mangan, 278 F. 85, at page 88. It is unnecessary to attribute bad faith to her statement that she did not see the '■headlight as she went along the bridge, for she was not then on a line with the railroad tracks, was continually getting farther from them, was carrying an umbrella, attending to her three children, had no reason to look for the engine, and the engine itself was at that time far away.

While Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 970, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leiby-v-pennsylvania-r-ca2-1932.