Magoon v. Boston & Maine Rd.

67 Vt. 177
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 67 Vt. 177 (Magoon v. Boston & Maine Rd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magoon v. Boston & Maine Rd., 67 Vt. 177 (Vt. 1894).

Opinion

TYLER, J.

This suit was brought to recover damages tor injuries sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the alleged negligence of the défendant.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the defendant was guilty of negligence ; that it might have pushed the cars further south so as to have cleared the crossing instead of leaving them upon it; that it thereby violated Act No. 39, Laws of 1882, and rendered itself liable to a fine of from five dollars to twenty dollars.

It further tended to show that this highway crossing had existed in substantially the same manner for twenty years or more, and that during a considerable part of that time, in going to and from his work, the plaintiff had passed it daily ; that he knew that it was within the limits of the B. & M. freight car yard; that freight trains were made up on it; that in passing he frequently found cars upon the crossing and had to wait for their removal, the time varying from five to twenty-five minutes; that on this occasion eight or ten cars stood upon the crossing — three or four south and the others north of it when he reached it — and had stood there, he thought, after he came in sight of it, about fifteen minutes when he attempted to pass over the couplings ; that as he stood beside these cars he could see quite a distance south, and that no other cars stood on that track; that the north end of the obstructing cars cut off his view of the track in that direction ; that no engine was attached to these cars and none was in sight; that before attempting to pass he stepped back from the cars some fifteen or twenty feet to see if an engine was in sight and saw none; that an engine of the B. & M., with two cars attached in such a way that the cars were between the crossing and the engine, stood north of the crossing at or near the water tank; that he [183]*183then stepped forward to the cars, seized hold of the irons (ladders) on the ends of two cars and threw his feet upon the heads of the draw bars, but was unable to throw his body up; thatjhie was engaged in a lively struggle for about half a minute, as he estimated the time, when the engine and two cars ran down from the north and coupled with the obstructing cars, and pushed them south off the crossing; that in his attempts to raise himself his left foot slipped onto the coupling links, so.that when the cars came together his foot was crushed between the two draw bar heads ; that two or three persons passed between the cars before he made the attempt; that no bell rang-and no whistle sounded while he was waiting; that there was no necessity for his crossing before the cars should be removed other than that he expected his daughter was, as usual, waiting for him with a carriage on the east side of the tracks, though she was not in fact waiting. The plaintiff was sixty-five -years old, and weighed from one hundred and eighty to one hundred and ninety pounds. It did not appear that any official or employe of the defendant knew that other persons had crossed or of the plaintiff’s attempt.

Although upon the plaintiff’s evidence no employes of the defendant were in charge of the cars and there were no indications that they were about to move, he must have known that they would soon be moved from the crossing ; that if they stood there as long a time as he thought they had, they were liable to be moved at any moment. It is apparent that the people who had collected at the crossing on both sides of the tracks momentarily expected the cars to be moved, as was the custom. Though the plaintiff could see that no engine was attached, he could not assure himself that one was not in a position to run down and be attached in less time than he would require to mount and cross over the couplings. It does not-appear that he inquired of any person whether or not the cars were about to [184]*184move, or that he used any diligence to ascertain, except to step back a few feet so that he could the better see the track, which he says he could see but a short distance. The engine was in fact close at hand, as the event proved.

It is a general rule that though the defendant may have been guilty of negligence and of a violation of law, the plaintiff cannot recover if his own negligence contributed to the happening of the accident. . Beach on Contrib. Neg., s. 64, says :

“No failure on the part of the railroad company to do its duty will excuse anyone from using the senses of sight and hearing upon approaching a railway crossing ; and whenever the due use of either sense wpuld have enabled the injured person to escape the danger, the injury is^ conclusive evidence of negligence without any reference to the railroad company’s failure to perform its duty.”

This court has repeatedly held that where a party claims to have suffered damage by the carelessness or negligence of another, it is a rule nearly if not entirely universal that if the negligence or carelessness of the person injured contributed in any material degree to the production of the injury complained of, he cannot recover ; that if the injury is in whole or in part owing to the plaintiff’s want of ordinary care or prudence, he cannot recover. Rob. Dig. 480, PI. 14» *5-

The defendant claimed in the court below that the case made by the plaintiff showed him to have been guilty of contributory negligence, so that in law he was not entitled to a verdict. Ordinarily, under the long settled rule in this state, this is a question of fact for the jury, and in this case there was no error in the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for the defendant, unless the case fell under the exception to the rule. Rogers v. Swanton, 54 Vt. 585 ; Fassett v. Roxbury, 55 Vt. 552. The exception to the general rule is clearly stated by Ross, C. J., in Latremouille v. B. & R. Co., 63 Vt. 336, as follows :

[185]*185“It only becomes a question of law purely, when conceding the facts to be undisputed, orto be such as the testimony most favorable to the plaintiff has any reasonable tendency to establish, they will not warrant a legal inference, nor if the inference be of a fact, have a reasonable tendency to support such inference of fact, necessary to give the plaintiff a verdict.”

In that case the plaintiff’s intestate was a car inspector and repairer of -the defendant and went under a standing car to repair it, knowing that a train was liable at any moment to back down upon it. A train did back down and he received fatal injuries ; held, that the danger was obvious, and that there could be no recovery.

In Worthington v. Cen. Vt. R. Co., 64 Vt. 107, Rowell, J., stated the rule concisely as follows :

“When the standard of negligence.is not prescribed, and there is a combination of facts and circumstances relied upon to show negligence, the question becomes one of law only when those facts and circumstances are so decisive one way or the other as to leave no reasonable doubt about it — no room for opposing inferences. This is clearly shown by the adjudged cases.”

In that case the plaintiff, a passenger, was unnecessarily standing on the steps or platform of a rapidly moving train. See Germond’s Admr. v. Cen. Vt. R. Co., 65 Vt. 126.

It has often been held that it is gross negligence in a traveler to attempt to pass between the cars of a standing train to which an engine is attached, and which he knows, or reasonably ought to know, is ready to move. This is so laid down in the text books. In

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Bluebook (online)
67 Vt. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magoon-v-boston-maine-rd-vt-1894.