Miller v. Lehigh Valley Railroad

58 Pa. Super. 558, 1914 Pa. Super. LEXIS 352
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 20, 1914
DocketAppeal, No. 224
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 Pa. Super. 558 (Miller v. Lehigh Valley Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Lehigh Valley Railroad, 58 Pa. Super. 558, 1914 Pa. Super. LEXIS 352 (Pa. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

On a motion for judgment n. o. v. Terry, P. J., filed the following opinion:

The plaintiff was injured while attempting to cross the defendant’s main tracks at grade on Bridge street in Tunkhannock borough on October 21, 1911, in the afternoon. He was alone in a buggy driving a horse. The engine of a passing special passenger train struck his horse, he was thrown from the wagon and his leg broken. The horse had to be killed to end its suffering, and the wagon was wrecked. The plaintiff was taken to a hospital, and after leaving there three weeks later used crutches and then a cane to the time of trial, in October, 1913. He brought this suit for damages, alleging the defendant negligently caused the accident by running its train at excessive speed and by not giving warning of its approach to the crossing. The defendant contended it was not negligent, and that the accident was due to the carelessness of the plaintiff in going upon the crossing in front of the engine when it was or should have been visible to him. We declined to give binding instructions for the defendant, and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,000. This motion was then made, but a new trial was not requested. If the [560]*560plaintiff was entitled to recover the defendant cannot justly complain of the amount of the verdict, nor has it done so. The motion has recently been argued, and having given the views of counsel due consideration, after a careful study of the testimony and an examination of the authorities cited, and others as well, we have concluded that we could not properly have withdrawn the case from the jury.

The essential facts are substantially as follows:

Bridge street runs north and south, and the direction of the railroad tracks is east and west. Owing to buildings lining the west side of the street in the vicinity of the crossing, no view can be had of the tracks west of it until about on the first one, or very close to it. There are also some buildings on the east side of the street, and along the railroad, a little below or east of the crossing, some trees and bushes; but a view of the tracks east of the crossing can be had for some distance—just how far was disputed. Frank Hancock, an employee of, and called by, the defendant, testified that he had stood there at forty-five feet north of the track and could see east a mile or more, including “the whole curve and clear below the Y.” . And at fifty feet he said “you could see nearly the whole distance yet, not quite.” East of the street the tracks cross a bridge, over a creek, referred to as the railroad bridge, which is 366 feet east of the crossing. East of the bridge there is quite a long curve extending towards the Y, which is 3,286 feet east of 'the crossing. The bridge is 226 feet long; 1,335 feet east of the crossing is the whistling post; 269 feet west of the crossing is a water crane. The width of the street does not appear in the testimony, that we can find, but it probably is shown on a map offered in evidence, not yet attached to the stenographer’s record. The railroad station is on Warren street, the first street west of Bridge street, but just how far from the latter we do not find stated. The plaintiff testified that as he approached [561]*561the crossing he saw a train of box, or milk cars moving west, and that he stopped on a little grade that went up on the tracks, with his horse just on the rise, or “standing up the grade.” When first asked how far that stop was north of the track, he replied, “Why, I never measured it, but I don’t think it was two rods.” Later during the trial, having in the meantime, he said, gone and looked, he stated that where he stopped “was about between forty and fifty feet.” At this point he said he stopped, looked and listened. He once said that from this stopping place he could not see the bridge, and that he could not see clear around the curve until after getting over the crossing. Again he said, that from this place he could not see far east, maybe ten feet or something like that, and at another time, about twenty feet. But after having gone to the scene of the accident, during the trial, he stated that from such stopping place he could see down, meaning east, the tracks about 250 feet. But on cross-examination he said he could not see far enough to enable him to cross in safety; and that in order to look down the track to see if a train was coming it was necessary to get closer than where he first stopped. The witness Hancock was asked how far it was from the north rail to the foot of the grade—the little grade mentioned—and replied: “Oh, I think it is about sixty feet.” Only one witness, Mr. Betts, mentioned a usual stopping place for persons traveling in the direction the plaintiff was going, which he said was about where the plaintiff stopped at the foot of the little grade; but the effect of his testimony was that such point was hardly a safe place. The plaintiff testified that he saw no train, only the milk train that was going in the switch, and that when that went on he started up and after he got within twenty-five feet of the tracks, or closer, he could see east to a point 200 feet beyond the bridge, but not any further on account of bushes in the way, “down there.” He said: “And after I started I stopped again before I went on the tracks; [562]*562I didn’t see any object in the way, and I went on, and my horse got partly over the first rail, and that train came so quick that I didn’t have a glance of it before it struck my horse, and that is all I remember about it.” He said he “didn’t hear it nor see it until just that time;” and that he heard no whistle and the bell was not ringing. At another time on cross-examination (before he testified he had, during the trial, visited the scene of the accident) he testified as follows: “Q. If I understood you yesterday, and I think I am correct, you said you stopped at the foot of the grade, or where your horse began to go up the grade? A. Yes, sir. Q. Well, at that point could you have seen anything of a train coming from the east, if you had looked? A. You couldn’t see far, maybe ten feet, or something like that, down the track. There were trees there. Q. Then in' order to look down the track to see if a train was coming it was necessary for you to get closer than where you first stopped, was it not? A. Yes, sir. Q. Then if I recollect your testimony correctly, you said you stopped within about ten feet of the track? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you saw nothing, no obstacle, you said, in the way, and you drove on? A. Yes, sir. Q. There was nothing in the way, that you could see, of your driving across the track? A. No, sir, or I wouldn’t have started.” Again, when last examined about the accident, beginning with a reference to his first stop, he said: “I stopped there and I looked and I didn’t see no train coming, and I drove up and I looked and I didn’t see no train coming, so I cast my eyes up where they were switching above, I cast my eyes up that way to see if there was a train coming, and at that time I was struck.” After another reference to his first stop, and being asked if he stopped again after that, he replied, “It is my impression I did, but I couldn’t swear positively.” A little later he was asked, “You won’t testify as to whether you stopped again after that stopping fifty feet back or not,” and he answered, “It is my [563]*563opinion I did stop within, well, twenty feet of the track, or maybe closer, I couldn’t say.” Whether the last three words qualified stopping or distance is not clear. At another time he testified as follows: “Q. Was that at the time you made your last stop, when your horse was within fifteen feet of the track? A. Why, I think I was moving. Q. Did you stop after that? A.

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Related

Cheslock v. Pittsburgh Railways Co.
69 A.2d 108 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Warlich v. Miller
51 F. Supp. 71 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1943)
Johnson v. Staples
5 A.2d 433 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Pa. Super. 558, 1914 Pa. Super. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-lehigh-valley-railroad-pasuperct-1914.