Lynam and Wife v. P., W. B. R. R. Co.

9 Del. 583
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Del. 583 (Lynam and Wife v. P., W. B. R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynam and Wife v. P., W. B. R. R. Co., 9 Del. 583 (Del. Ct. App. 1874).

Opinion

This was an action on the case against the company for negligently running a train of cars against a carriage in which the wife of the plaintiff, Thomas P. Lynam, was riding and driving across the railroad of the company, and by which she was very severely injured.

The wife of the plaintiff with a son of theirs seventeen years of age, and a young lady left the City of Wilmington after dark about 6 o'clock on Christmas Eve, 1872, in a double seated carriage drawn by a single horse, to return to the farm of the father of the plaintiff, on the Newport turnpike, through which the railroad of the company runs between the dwelling house, barn and stables upon it, and the turnpike in front of it; and upon which the only carriage way from the turnpike to the dwelling house and other farm buildings, is a lane about three hundred yards in length, which descends by a slight and uniform slope of the ground naturally from the turnpike for about two hundred and twenty-five yards to the railroad which it crosses at nearly right angles, and terminates near the dwelling house and the buildings adjacent to it. The course of the railroad through the farm and beyond it in a western direction is perfectly straight for two miles, at least; and owing to that fact and the comparatively level surface of the country through which it is there laid, and the slope of the lane as before mentioned, the descent of the latter from the turnpike to the railroad and across it to the dwelling house, commands a full and uninterrupted view by *Page 584 daylight of the entire line of the railroad and any train upon it for the same distance in that direction. There is a private crossing over the railroad at the intersection of the lane with it, constructed and maintained by the company for the use and benefit of the owners of the farm; and it was on that the collision in question occurred.

The distance from Wilmington to the farm is six miles; the night was dark, windy and very cold, the ground was hard frozen, and there was a good deal of ice on the road, which caused the horse to slip much, as he was unshod. Mrs. Lynam was driving with both her son and the young lady seated on the front seat with her, pushed back against the bind seat, and both of the side curtains of the front seat of the carriage were rolled up; but the ladies rode with their cloaks wrapt closely about them and with the hoods of them drawn over their heads. They reached the entrance to the lane from the turnpike about seven o'clock, and at once drove into it and down it at the same gail they had previously been traveling, to the crossing and upon it without stopping, or looking out in either direction of the railroad from it or listening in order to ascertain if any train or engine might then be approaching it, or without anything said to indicate that any thought or apprehension of a passing train on that part of the railroad at that hour had occurred to either of them, except that when they had proceeded at that gait about two-thirds of the way down the lane from the turnpike to the dwelling house, the young lady looked out of the carriage in a western direction down the railroad, from which direction the train in question was then rapidly approaching the crossing, and simply remarked that she "could see a light in cousin Dal's house," alluding to the residence of a neighboring farmer and relation of hers, a half of a mile or more distant from them in the same direction near the railroad, but on the opposite side of it from where they then were. But no further notice or observation was taken of it and no other remark was made about it. The horse they were driving was remarkably gentle and without any fear of *Page 585 locomotives or railroad trains, and had entirely crossed the track and cleared all but the hind part of the carriage of the last rail of it on the crossing when the train in question, a regular passenger train consisting of nine cars well filled with passengers, an hour behind the usual time of passing there, and approaching with rapid speed from the western direction before described, struck the rear portion of the carriage, knocking it entirely off the track and crossing into a side ditch, and at the same time overturning and nearly demolishing it, but without doing very serious injury to either of the others in it. The usual headlight of the locomotive was entirely out at the time, and had been before the train reached a station on the railroad where it stopped to take in passengers several miles west of the crossing; but a small and ordinary railroad lantern had been suspended m front of the engine and was lighted and burning at the time, as a temporary substitute for it. There was also another lantern of a similar kind lighted and burning in the cab of the locomotive, as well as the usual lamps lighted at night in all the passenger cars. And no whistle was blown, or bell rung on the locomotive, or other signal or warning given of the approach of the train before it reached the crossing and the collision which immediately followed. The usual headlights on the locomotives of the company can be distinctly seen from the lane and the crossing at night as far as two miles down the road in that direction and never fail in approaching and passing there to illuminate with a brilliant light even the yard in front of the mansion on the farm, as well as all the track of the railroad for several hundred feet immediately in front of them. And from the testimony of both of the persons with Mrs. Lynam in the carriage, it was evident that it was upon that fact and also upon the fact that they were familiar with the place, and were well aware of the usual times, both day and night, for all the regular passenger trains on the railroad to pass there in either direction, and that about six o'clock in the evening was the time for that train to pass there, and should *Page 586 have passed there at least an hour sooner that evening, that they relied with such implicit confidence and assurance on their entire freedom from all danger of encountering any passing train on that part of the road at such an hour, that they took no heed or thought whatever for their safety or security against such a contingency on the occasion in question. But freight trains they said passed there at all hours of the night, and that the rumbling of a heavy train on the road can frequently be heard there when as much as two miles off.

T. F. Bayard, for the defendants, after evidence to the foregoing effect had been adduced, and the counsel for the plaintiffs announced that he had closed his testimony for the present, moved a nonsuit, because it had failed to show that the injury complained of and sued for, was occasioned without fault and negligence on the part of the wife of the plaintiff and those with her in the carriage at the time of the accident. To entitle them to recover in the action, the negligence of the defendant must be affirmatively proven, not only to have been the cause of the injury, but the sole cause of it, and without any fault or negligence, or want of due care, diligence and prudence on her part and those with her in the carriage which contributed in any, even the slightest degree, to the production of it; for negligence on the part of the plaintiff which contributes in any degree to the accident or the cause of the injury, cannot be relieved or qualified by the negligence of the defendant, but to make the latter answerable for it, his negligence must be of an unmixed character, and in which the plaintiff is entirely free from any contributory negligence, and the defendant is wholly and solely to blame. Dascomb vs. B. S. L. R. R. Co., 24 Barb. 221. Hartfield vs. Roper et al. 21 Wend. 615.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Del. 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynam-and-wife-v-p-w-b-r-r-co-delsuperct-1874.