Osgood v. Boston & Maine Railroad

141 A. 132, 83 N.H. 262, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 6, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 141 A. 132 (Osgood v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osgood v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 141 A. 132, 83 N.H. 262, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 12 (N.H. 1928).

Opinion

Snow, J.

It is the plaintiffs’ primary contention that the gate-man failed in his duty to their intestates in permitting the car to enter upon the crossing in view of the proximity of the on-coming train. The question presented is whether the likelihood or probability of a collision was such that no person of ordinary prudence in the position of the gateman, in the situation there existing, would have permitted the car to enter upon the tracks when and as he did. Derosier v. Company, 81 N. H. 451, 459, 461, 463; Tullgren v. Company, 82 N. H. 268, 276, 277.

For the period of time which was allowed Carlton for the crossing we are wholly dependent upon the statement of Milne, who testified that the car proceeding at a continuing speed, which “may have been” “ten or eleven, or maybe fifteen” miles per hour, was stalled upon the easterly edge of the south-bound track for a period of five or six seconds, and again upon the westerly edge of that track for two and a half to three seconds when and where it was struck by the engine. It conclusively appears that except for the stallings of the car the accident would not have occurred. On the evidence most favorable to the plaintiffs, both as respects the speed (10 miles per hour) and the delay due to the stallings (7.5 seconds), the car, except for the time lost by such stallings, would have been somewhat more than one hundred feet past the point of collision on arrival of the train.

The only evidence offered of unusual conditions here bearing-on the likelihood of cars stalling was the presence of a rise of four or five inches in the asphalt surface of the crossing between the tracks in one or two places and extending the width of the street. Opinions were given that differences in level have a tendency, by lowering the foot of an operator, to feed gas quickly and choke the motor and thus decrease the speed; and that a car is more likely to stall when going “slow.” What was meant by “slow” is not defined. It is not to be inferred, however, that the witnesses meant that a speed of ten miles per hour was likely to induce stalling, and *266 it could not be found on the evidence that the gateman should have anticipated a reduction of the speed of the car below that rate. On the other hand, it affirmatively appears that Carlton proceeded at a uniform speed of ten, eleven or fifteen miles per hour until the car stalled on the easterly edge of the south-bound track. The inconsiderable variations in level shown, in view of the absence of evidence that vehicles had ever before stalled or experienced any similar difficulty at this crossing, do not afford a sufficient basis for a finding that the gateman should reasonably have anticipated that it was so probable that such minor surface conditions would induce the stalling of cars without fault of the driver that he should for that reason have made a special or additional allowance of time for meeting such a contingency.

The plaintiffs urge, however, that, in addition to the time required to safely make the crossing under normal conditions, and apart from the defective conditions claimed, it was the gateman’s duty to allow for a margin of safety for travelers to extricate themselves from, peril in case of accidents which might befall their car while making a crossing; and argue that a variety of likely happenings might occur, such as (to use their illustrations) stalling, breaking an axle or rear-housing, or losing a wheel or tire; that it was not necessary that the gateman should have anticipated the precise danger or damage occasioned but only some danger or damage of a similar nature. It is true that, under the rule of reasonable anticipation, it is not necessary that the gateman should have had reason to anticipate that his alleged wrongful conduct should become operative to the deceased’s injury in the exact way in which it did. Derosier v. Company, supra, 461, 462. When, however, as under the premise here assumed, the plaintiffs’ sole claim is that such conduct was likely to become operative to produce their injury only upon the happening of some contingency, there must be evidence of such a likelihood of the happening of that contingency, or of similar contingencies, as would have impelled an ordinarily prudent man in the gateman’s position to take protective action to meet it. Upon this point the plaintiffs must fail for want of proof. There was no evidence from which it could be found that cars had ever before stalled, or met with any of the enumerated or similar difficulties, upon this or any other crossing; or that this car, either with or without the knowledge of the defendant, had ever stalled at any time or place. Nor is there any merit in the argument advanced that the general likelihood of cars stalling was so far a matter of common knowledge that the jury *267 could find that the gateman was chargeable therewith. If it be true as urged in argument that it is a common occurrence at highway-crossings for cars to be stalled when they are obliged to slow down at the behest of an officer or for the purpose of safety, a comparable situation is not presented.

It is not necessary to decide whether, in view of the requirements of modern travel, a jury will be allowed to find that a reasonably prudent man in the position of the gateman under normal conditions might not have considered as an adequate allowance to make the crossing, a period which admitted, not only of safely crossing the tracks at a speed of ten miles per hour, but, while continuing at the same slow speed, of reaching a point more than one hundred feet beyond the danger line. Upon the question whether there was findable negligence in the conduct of the gateman here in failing to lower the gates, the situation in which he was placed by reason of the conduct and ostensible purpose of Carlton, as they must have appeared from the gateman’s position, is an important factor.

P. L., c. 249, ss. 15, 16, 22, provide that municipalities shall place warning signs on every highway approaching railroad crossings at grade at a reasonable distance, of not less than three hundred feet, from such crossing; and require that the driver of an automobile passing such a sign shall, subject to penalty, reduce his speed to within ten miles per hour for the last one hundred feet before reaching the crossing. The evidence discloses the presence of such a sign on Canal street north of its junction with West Central, substantially three hundred feet from the nearest rail measured on the center lines of the roadways of said streets. If it be assumed that the roadway of Canal street is of the same width as that of West Central, this distance would appear to be two hundred ninety-nine feet and two inches. The width of the roadway of Canal street not being in evidence, it does not definitely appear whether or not the sign was the full required three hundred feet from the crossing. If, however, it be assumed that the city made such an inconsiderable mistake in the placement of the sign which ordinary observation would not disclose, neither the defendant nor its servants are chargeable with knowledge of such error. It follows that the gateman had no reason to anticipate the approach of a car from Canal street at a greater speed than ten miles an hour, and could not be found negligent because he failed to sooner lower the gates in anticipation of an approach at a greater speed.

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133 A. 4 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1926)
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130 A. 145 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
141 A. 132, 83 N.H. 262, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osgood-v-boston-maine-railroad-nh-1928.