McCool v. West Jersey & Seashore Railroad

81 A. 111, 81 N.J.L. 479, 52 Vroom 479, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 156
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 14, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 A. 111 (McCool v. West Jersey & Seashore Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCool v. West Jersey & Seashore Railroad, 81 A. 111, 81 N.J.L. 479, 52 Vroom 479, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 156 (N.J. 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of tiie court was delivered by

Tbenchakd, ,T.

This writ of error brings up for review a judgment entered upon a verdict directed for the defendant at the Camden Circuit, in an action brought to recover damages for injuries sustained in a crossing accident.

The verdict was directed for the defendant upon the ground of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence.

At the trial it appeared that the plaintiff was a young man twenty-four years of age. In the month of October, 1907, he [480]*480was driving a light, covered delivery wagon, drawn by a slow, old horse, in an easterly direction along Kohler street, in South Gloucester, and came to the crossing of defendant’s tracks, upon which both steam and electric trains are operated, the latter by the third-rail system. There are three tracks, all of them used for trains, and running northerly and. southerly and at right angles to the street. As the plaintiff approached the crossing, his view of the tracks on the right-hand or southerly side was obstructed, first, fay a board fence bounding the property of one Howlett, and extending for a distance of one hundred feet parallel to and about twenty-two feet distant westerly from the nearest rail of the first or westerly track. This fence was about six feet high, and obstructed a view of the tracks, but not of a train coming upon the tracks. Beyond the fence, and standing seven feet nearer to the tracks and running parallel therewith for a distance of seventy-five feet or more, was a high, tight sign board, the top of which was thirteen feet above the level of the rail, and which admittedly constituted a complete obstruction to the effective view of the track to the south.

The proofs show that a person traveling in the centre of Kohler street does not get a view of the tracks to the south for a sufficient distance to be of any practical use until he has at least reached a point forty-eight feet west from the nearest rail of the furthest track, which point .is about twenty-four feet westerly from the nearest rail of the nearest track. At that point a person can see the railroad to the south far enough to give him a view of about six hundred and fifty feet of the easterly or third track, upon which an electric train of three cars was coming, unknown to the plaintiff, and admittedly without giving the statutory signals. Of course, from that point forward, the view down the track lengthens. About one thousand one hundred feet from the crossing the track curves towards the west.

As the plaintiff approached the crossing a freight train was passing on the westerly or nearest track, going south. It was a long train, made up of twenty-two cars, and drawn by a locomotive engine. The plaintiff testified that he stopped long [481]*481enough for the freight train to go one hundred or two hundred feet down the road. He says: “I waited for the freight train to get out of the way so I could have a clear vision of the track and see if there were any other trains coming.”

Van Dexter, a witness called for the defence, testified that the freight train had got about two hundred yards from the Holder street crossing when McCool started to go across, or when his horse got his feet on the first track; and again he says that the freight train had got one hundred or one hundred and fifty feet beyond the sign referred to when the horse’s feet reached the nearest rail. The same witness further testified that when the horse stopped (short of the crossing), and while the freight train was passing, the horse’s head was about ten or twelve feet from the nearest rail.

The plaintiff testified that, after waiting for the passing of the freight train to open up a clear view of the track, and then looking carefully both ways and listening, and seeing and hearing nothing, he proceeded slowly, continuing to look and listen, and the fact is that he reached the furthest track and his horse had got clear of it when the wagon was struck by the electric train coming from the south.

Vo contention is made, and in view of the proofs, none can he made, that the direction of a verdict can be justified because of want of proof of negligence of the defendant.

The verdict for the defendant was directed upon the ground of contributory negligence. It seems to have been rested upon the theory, and it is here contended, first, that the plaintiff started across the track while the freight train still blocked his viewy or second, if that be not so, that careful observation upon the part of the plaintiff would have disclosed the approach of the electric train in time for him to have avoided the collision.

We are of opinion that there is no view of the evidence which renders the alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff a court question.

Of course, if the evidence conclusively showed that the plaintiff attempted to cross while the freight train obstructed his view' of the train approaching upon the other track, he [482]*482might well have been held guilty of contributory negligence barring a recovery, under the authority of West J ersey Railroad Co. v. Ewan, 26 Vroom 574, and Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v. Pfuelb, 31 Id. 278; affirmed, 32 Id. 287. We agree that it was open to the jury to find from some of the evidence that the plaintiff did that thing. But it was also open to them from other evidence, some of which we have recited, to find that when he attempted to cross, the freight train no longer obstructed his view. The evidence tends to show that he stopped when his horse’s head was ten or twelve feet from the nearest rail of the nearest track, and upon which the freight train passed, a very good place for the purpose considering conditions present; that he waited there until the freight train had gone out of sight behind the sign board. The plaintiff in effect so testified, and he is corroborated by a consideration of the testimony as to the relative positions of the plaintiff, the sign board and the freight train at the moment the plaintiff started. It was, therefore, clearly open to the jury to find that when he started from his safe place of observation, the freight train no longer obstructed his view, but was so far in the distance that a reasonably prudent person might judge that it was time to go forward. There appears to have been no evidence, and there is in- this case no necessary inference, that the freight train as it disappeared in the distance made any noise which interfered with the plaintiff’s hearing at the time he started forward. No such contention is made by the defendant.

We are also of opinion that it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that careful observation upon the part of the plaintiff would have disclosed the approach of the electric train in time for him to have avoided the collision. It was necessary for him to make his observation once for' all before entering upon the tracks, because he could not safely turn or retreat after he had once embarked upon the crossing. These tracks were dangerous places, and on both sides of the crossing were cattle-guards and other dangerous equipment of the third-rail system. It was reasonable to infer that from the place where he started his horse, after having stopped to look, to the place where he was when the train struck his wagon, he had a dis[483]*483tance of about sixty feet to travel.

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Bluebook (online)
81 A. 111, 81 N.J.L. 479, 52 Vroom 479, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccool-v-west-jersey-seashore-railroad-nj-1911.