Moore v. Maine Central Railroad

76 A. 871, 106 Me. 297, 1909 Me. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 76 A. 871 (Moore v. Maine Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Maine Central Railroad, 76 A. 871, 106 Me. 297, 1909 Me. LEXIS 54 (Me. 1909).

Opinion

Savage, J.

.Action on the case to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant, in running one of its trains at a dangerous and unlawful rate of speed. The train collided with a team driven by the plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff was seriously injured. The defendant denies negligence on its own part, and contends that the plaintiff was guilty [299]*299of contributory negligence. The verdict was for the plaintiff, and the case comes up on the defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The collision complained of occurred at Ellsworth Falls, about five o’clock in the afternoon of December 19,1908. The situation may be better understood by referring to the accompanying sketch.

' At Ellsworth Falls there is a junction of two roads, the Waltham road, so called, and the Bangor road. About one hundred and eighty feet westerly from, the junction there is a passage way about ninety feet long and twenty feet wide, connecting the two roads. Upon the heater piece bounded by the two roads and the passage way stand the store and storehouse of the Whitcomb & Haynes Company, and in the rear of the store is a platform, onto which the rear door of the store opens. On the outer side of the passage way is another storehouse. The tracks of the defendant’s railroad are laid within the limits of the Bangor road all the way from a point considerably east of a watering trough which stands in the "square” formed by the junction of the two highways to a point two hundred and forty feet west of the passage way, substantially as [300]*300shown in the sketch. From the northerly rail to the platform is forty-three feet; to the northwest corner of the store is twenty-five and one-half feet; to the southwest corner of the store is nearly nine feet; and to the storehouse on the westerly side of the passage way is nearly thirty-three feet. On the west side of the passage way stands an electric light pole, thirteen feet from the rail, and on the east side, ten feet from the rail, stands a railroad sign post' on which is a sign reading, "Railroad Crossing.” There were no other obstructions between the store and the track. The train consisted of a locomotive, tender and caboose car. It was running northerly from Washington Junction to Bangor as a special, without time schedule.

The other material facts which the jury might properly have found from the evidence, though somewhat in dispute, are these. The plaintiff, who was a teamster in the employment of the Whitcomb & Haynes Company, was on his way to the stable, at the end of his day’s work. He drove up the Waltham road from the watering trough and down the passage way to the platform, for the purpose of getting several bags of meal from the store. His team consisted of a pair of horses and a traverse sled. The horses were old, well broken, accustomed to trains of cars, and usually not afraid of them. When the plaintiff stopped the team, the sled was abreast the platform, and the horses were facing the railroad. He threw the reins over a stake on the sled, and, leaving the horses unhitched, went across the platform, opened the door, took a bag of meal which was near the door, and immediately returned to the platform, where he says he first heard the sound of an approaching train. The horses were then starting, or had already started a step or two. The plaintiff threw the bag onto the sled, and jumped on himself and seized the reins. What happened afterwards is in dispute. The plaintiff contends that his horses became frightened by the approaching train, that he could not stop them, and that he then tried to swing them to the right so as to keep them off the track, and that in so doing the horses or sled or both came in contact with the passing locomotive. On the other hand the defendant contends that the plaintiff was attempting to cross the track'in [301]*301front of the train, and that his horses were on the track when the locomotive hit them. Of the merit of these contentions, we shall speak later on.

Just before the time of collision, the engineer discovered the team, applied the emergency brake, and stopped the train as quickly as it could be stopped, at a distance of about two hundred and forty-seven feet from the crossing. It was found that the horses and sled had been thrown or carried along a considerable distance. They were on the easterly side of the tracks, just at the rear end of the train when it stopped. The horses were not much hurt. In some way, the plaintiff had been thrown under, or partly under the pilot of the locomotive, and in that position had been pushed along on the rail or ground.

The plaintiff contends that the train was proceeding at a speed variously estimated at from twenty to thirty-five miles an hour, and in violation of R. S., ch. 52, sect. 86, which reads as follows: "No engine or train shall run across a highway near the compact part of a town at a speed greater than six miles an hour, unless the parties operating the railroad maintain a flagman, or a gate, or automatic signals ordered or approved by the railroad commissioners, at thé crossing of such highway.....” The defendant had no flagman at the crossing. Nor was there any gate or signals.

But the defendant contends, so far as the statute is concerned, that it is not applicable (1) because the passage way upon which the plaintiff was driving, and which crossed the railroad, at or near the point of collision, was not a highway within the meaning of the statute, and (2) because it was not "near the compact part of a town.” It also contends that the train was not moving at a dangerous rate of speed. We will consider these contentions in their order.

The passage way connected two public ways. It was a short cutoff between the Waltham road and the Bangor road. There .was evidence from which the jury might properly find that, though never laid out as a way, under the statute, it had been open, and had been commonly used by the public for the purposes of travel [302]*302for at least forty years, and that the public had gained a prescriptive right of travel over the way. The defendant, however, urges that a right to cross a railroad cannot be gained by prescription, citing Chapin v. Maine Central Railroad Co., 97 Maine, 151. This is undoubtedly true. But it is shown in reply that the Maine Shore Line Railroad Company, which was the predecessor of the defendant company, when it built its road, took a deed of the premises where this passage way crossing is, and that deed contained the following provision : — "Said company by acceptance of this deed promising to construct and maintain one train crossing over the track on said strip herein conveyed.” . And it also appears that the defendant has kept the crossing open, has kept it planked, at times has stretched a rope across the way while fast trains have been passing, and has maintained a sign at the crossing on which are the words "Railroad Crossing,” which as well as being a warning, was an invitation to the public to use the crossing. In view of these facts, which are undisputed, we think that at the time of the accident the public had a right to cross the railroad from the passage way, at least, with teams, and that is all that this case calls for.

The next question is, was the passage way a "highway” within the meaning of the statute? In the chapter of definitions, R. S., ch. 1, sect: 6, cl. VI, ibis provided that "the word ‘highway’ may include a county bridge, county road or county way.” In Cleaves v. Jordan,

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Bluebook (online)
76 A. 871, 106 Me. 297, 1909 Me. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-maine-central-railroad-me-1909.