McGrath v. Hudson River Rail Road

32 Barb. 144, 19 How. Pr. 211, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 64
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 Barb. 144 (McGrath v. Hudson River Rail Road) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrath v. Hudson River Rail Road, 32 Barb. 144, 19 How. Pr. 211, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 64 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinions

Hogeboom, J.

In actions for damages arising from negligence the plaintiff must prove the defendant’s negligence, and the plaintiff’s freedom from any negligence contributing to the injury. In this case, the judge, without deciding the question of the defendant’s negligence, nonsuited the plaintiff on account of negligence on the part of the child. He refused to submit the question to the jury as to the latter point, therefore substantially holding that a verdict for the plaintiff would have been set aside as unwarranted by the evidence.

What constitutes negligence is often, perhaps generally, a difficult question to decide. It is determined, for the purposes of a court and jury, by an inference of the mind from the facts of the case; and as minds are differently constituted, the inferences from a given state of facts will not always be the same. The facts may be so clear and decided that the inference of negligence is irresistible; but where either the facts or the inference to be drawn from them are in any degree doubtful, the better way is to submit the whole matter to a jury, under proper instructions as to the law. This is the more necessary, in cases of negligence, because of the great variety of considerations which enter into that question. The difficulty is increased by the fact that negligence is of different degrees, and because the fact whether negligence is slight, ordinary or gross, depends upon the peculiar circumstances of each case. The same facts might constitute great negligence in one case, which would scarcely amouut to slight negligence in another.

Again; negligence, which is nothing more than the want of care'—proper care'—is more or less affected by the conduct or action of the opposing party. It is not always negligence to cross a rail road track at times when a train is not due or [148]*148cannot be reasonably expected to pass; nor to cross a rail road track without looking for a train, when no signal of its approach is given, by the ringing of a bell or otherwise. It may not be negligence, that is, a degree of negligence which shall deprive a party of damages, to cross a rail road track immediately after a train has rapidly passed with much noise and ringing of bells, although another train, giving no signal of its approach, may be noiselessly approaching from an opposite direction on a contiguous and parallel track.

Whether such conduct is negligence, in this particular case, must depend upon a consideration of all the circumstances, and is a conclusion to be deduced from a careful and prudent examination of all the facts, and the legitimate inferences to be drawn therefrom. Ordinarily, therefore, it should be left to a jury to determine, and their determination, when founded upon conflicting evidence, or upon the uncertain deductions to be derived from particular facts, more or less clearly established, cannot generally be disturbed.

In this case I am of" opinion that if the noise and ringing of bells, attending the descending train passing rapidly across a public thoroughfare was so great as not only naturally to attract the attention of a person of ordinary caution, approaching from a nearly opposite direction, but naturally to make such person unaware of the approach of a train coming with very little noise from an opposite direction and giving no signal of its approach, an injury inflicted by the latter train is not the result of negligence practised by the party receiving the injury, in such a sense as deprives him, or his representatives, of an action for the same.

The greatest caution is very properly required of those who propel engines having such vast power of mischief; and while it is the established law that a party whose negligence contributed to the injury cannot recover, this rule which does not allow the jury to weigh the comparative negligence of the litigating parties, should not be extended so far as to take from the jury the right to determine (except in a very clear [149]*149and certain case) whether such negligence has in fact been committed.

The facts presented in this case seem to me of such a character as to require their submission to a jury, upon the demand of either party. Assuming that the deceased is to be held to the same degree of care which is demanded of an adult person, the girl was rightfully on the street; she had a right to cross the rail road track; she was obliged to do so, if her business led her north. A train was just passing to the south with rapidity, the bell ringing and the whistle sounding. It naturally and reasonably attracted her attention. It was possible, though not probable, that nearly at the same moment another train should pass in the opposite direction. It was not proper, but negligent, on the part of the defendant, to allow it so to pass without signalizing its approach. It was reasonable to expect that such warning and notice would be given. If it was not given, I think it was reasonable and prudent to conclude that no other train was approaching, and consequently that there would be no danger in crossing the track. It may be true that extraordinary caution would have demanded that the girl should have looked to the south, as well as to the north and west. I cannot say that it was such negligence not to do so as should defeat the action, if the backing train was proceeding so noiselessly as not naturally to have excited the attention of a prudent person.

I am therefore of opinion that a new trial should be granted, unless there are some adjudications which settle the rule in a contrary direction.

I do not discover, in any of the cases to which reference has been made, any adjudication which forbids the granting of a new trial in this case. The cases unquestionably hold that a nonsuit may be granted in cases of this character, as in other cases, where the proof is insufficient to maintain the cause of action; that clear proof of negligence on the part of the plaintiff entitles the defendant to demand a nonsuit; that where the facts are undisputed, and the inferences to be drawn from [150]*150them clear, and leading only to a single result, the question becomes one of law for a court to determine; that where there is full opportunity for observation, and abundant means for avoiding a collision, such as would occur to, and be embraced by, a person of ordinary prudence, the plaintiff is negligent for not embracing them.; and that the plaintiff is not relieved from the imputation of negligence unless his conduct is deprived of that character by the defendant’s own act or default.

Nevertheless, there are cases so nearly balanced, both as to the facts, and as to the inferences to be derived from them, that a court cannot safely, against the objection of a party, remove them from the consideration of the triers of questions of fact; and when such a course is taken against the will of a party, it can only be sustained upon the ground that there is no aspect of the case in which it can be considered, which would justify a verdict for the plaintiff. I do not regard this case as of that character, and am therefore of opinion that the nonsuit should be set aside, and a new trial should be granted, with costs to abide the event.

Peckham, J.

(After stating the facts.) Only one ground was presented for a nonsuit; and it is not therefore material to consider any other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Barb. 144, 19 How. Pr. 211, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-v-hudson-river-rail-road-nysupct-1860.