Rintala v. Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific Railway Co.

199 N.W. 562, 159 Minn. 499, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 672
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 13, 1924
DocketNo. 23,888
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 199 N.W. 562 (Rintala v. Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rintala v. Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific Railway Co., 199 N.W. 562, 159 Minn. 499, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 672 (Mich. 1924).

Opinions

Stone, J.

Action for personal injuries and property- damage sustained by plaintiff as the result of his attempt to cross defendant’s track in his motor truck ahead of a freight train. There was a verdict for plaintiff followed by a motion by defendant for judgment notwithstanding or a new trial. From the order denying that motion this appeal is taken.

The accident occurred at the village of Orr in St. Louis county on November 23, 1922. The highway in question is a village street crossing the raailway from east to west. The tracks, two in number, one the main line and the other a spur, lie in a northerly and southerly direction and the street crosses them at right angles. A short distance south of the crossing is a passenger station. Just north of the latter and between it and the crossing the spur track switches off from the main line. It is on the west side of the latter. At the time of the accident, the spur track was occupied by two box cars and a gondola car, the latter being at the north end, farthest, from the street. The southerly end of the string was somewhere from 12 to 21 feet from the crossing, the first figure being the estimate made by plaintiff at the trial and the latter a measurement made immediately after the accident. Plaintiff knew these cars were there; had been over the crossing just before; had “paid particular attention” to them as, in his own language, he “always paid when they were so close to the track.” This string of three cars is the only thing, in the nature of an obstruction, which prevented plaintiff’s having a full view of the approaching train for over 1,200 feet up the track' from the crossing.

The train was a logging train consisting of a large engine 15 cars of logs, 7 empties and a caboose. Shortly before it had pulled off the main line onto a “mill spur” about a quarter mile north of the station at Orr in order to give way to a local freight northbound.1 That train had just stopped at Orr. As soon as it passed the mill spur, the logging train pulled back onto the main line and proceeded southward.

For some distance, north of the crossing there is an upgrade. That is, the freight train came down grade to the crossing. About [501]*5011,250 feet north of the crossing there is a cut, and the main line curves somewhat to the east, but from the crossing, even of the spur track, it is possible to see through this cut and some distance beyond.

The jury found specially that defendant gave the statutory bell and whistle signals as the train approached the crossing; that the train’s speed, whatever it. may have been, was not a proximate cause of the accident, and that the engineer and fireman were not negligent in failing to keep a proper lookout as the train approached the crossing. The only alleged negligent act of defendant, found to be a proximate cause of the collision, was the failure to give warnings in addition to the statutory crossing signals. It is upon this special finding that the verdict rests. In other words, the jury was of the opinion (and otherwise their general verdict has no support), that, although defendant gave the signals by bell and whistle, required by statute, plaintiff might have been kept off the track if enough noise had been made by whistle and bell as the train approached.

The issue of contributory negligence is in the case, of course, and was resolved in plaintiff’s favor by the jury. There is no reason for considering any other issue.

Plaintiff had come to the station to meet the northbound way freight. Shortly after it left the station (the evidence does not fix definitely the time which elapsed), plaintiff cranked his motor, got into his truck and proceeded over a short semi-circular route, first away from the station and tracks in a westerly direction, and then gradually turning to his right until, on the street approaching and near the crossing, he was headed east.

On the truck was a load of 1,500 to 2,000 pounds. A cab with swinging doors inclosed the driver’s seat and the usual mechanism for control. As he approached the crossing, plaintiff was running the truck up a slight grade and in low gear. His speed was from one to two miles an hour and his brakes were in good condition.

It may have been, as he rounded the curve, that he would have seen, had he looked for it, the logging train approaching from the north. It might have been visible to his left of the freight cars [502]*502standing on the spur track. But that is a feature we pass, and assume that plaintiff, if he did look at any time while he was traversing the distance from the station around the curve to the crossing, could not have seen the train. In other words, we assume, con-formably to plaintiff’s claim, that the three cars, particularly the two box cars nearest him, obscured his vision northward to such an extent that he could not have seen the approaching train until he was far enough over the spur track to permit him to see up the main line, east of the box cars.

It was about 2 p. m. of a quiet afternoon. There was nothing to distract plaintiff’s attention as he made the semicircle from station to crossing. He claims to have looked north but without seeing the logging train. He admits that if it had whistled, as the jury found that it did, he could have heard it. He says: “I think I would hear it, if it was blown; I could hear it before; I heard lots of times when it was coming behind them box cars; it was full of box cars when I did hear when they was blowing the whistle.” The bell was ringing.

Plaintiff did not claim to have made any special effort to listen for a train approaching from either direction. As he got onto the crossing of the spur track, where he had an unobstructed view for at least 500 feet to the north, he did not look again in that direction, and without further precaution went onto the main line. His front wheels had reached the easterly rail before he was struck.

It is beyond successful contradiction that, allowing the three cars on the spur all possible effect as an obstruction to vision, plaintiff could have seen the approaching train, had he been looking for it, as he got onto the spur. Had he seen it then, he could have stopped his truck in time to avoid the collision. Of course, had he been at all alert, his sense of hearing should have warned him of the approaching train even though he did not see it.

Plaintiff’s explanation of the collision is, in substance, that he had just seen the way freight go north, knew there was a passing track something like two miles up the line in that direction, and assumed that no train would come from the north so soon. He professes ignorance of the fact that the “mill spur,” just a quarter of [503]*503a mile away, was ever used as a passing track. As he put it himself: “Well, I didn’t expect any other train coming from the north so soon.” “I was sure they never can pass (referring to the way freight and any train coming from the north), before they got to the passing track about two miles farther north.” He did not know that there was a train already on the spur track a quarter of a mile away waiting the passage of the northbound freight in order to take the main line south.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 N.W. 562, 159 Minn. 499, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rintala-v-duluth-winnipeg-pacific-railway-co-minn-1924.