Runnells v. Maine Central Railroad

190 A.2d 739, 159 Me. 200, 1963 Me. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 10, 1963
StatusPublished

This text of 190 A.2d 739 (Runnells 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
Runnells v. Maine Central Railroad, 190 A.2d 739, 159 Me. 200, 1963 Me. LEXIS 30 (Me. 1963).

Opinion

Williamson, C. J.

On appeal. This case arises from a collision between an automobile operated by the plaintiff *201 and the defendant’s train at a grade crossing at which the defendant had failed to maintain a warning sign in violation of statute. R. S., c. 45, § 73. The jury found for the defendant. By stipulation the sole issue on appeal is “the correctness of law of the instructions of the presiding justice that contributory negligence of the plaintiff would be a bar to her recovery under all counts of the complaint;

There is no substantial disagreement between the parties upon the facts insofar as they bear upon the validity of the instructions to the jury. The collision occurred at the Alden Street railroad crossing in Waterville shortly after six o’clock on the evening of January 21, 1957. The plaintiff, as she approached the College Avenue crossing, observed a blinking red light warning of an oncoming train. She then intended to turn to her right on Ash Street and thence cross the railroad at the Chaplin Street crossing where to her knowledge there was a flagman. By error she turned to her right on Maple Street, not Ash Street, and thence without stopping came upon the Alden Street crossing. After passing over five tracks, her car was struck on the sixth track by defendant’s locomotive as it was coming in for a scheduled stop at the Waterville Station only a short distance from the crossing. Alden Street, although it was never formally accepted as a town way, was treated as such for purposes of the case and thus the signboard statute, below, was applicable.

R. S., c. 45, insofar as we are here interested, reads:

“Sec. 73. Signboards maintained at grade crossings; bell on engine and when rung. — Every railroad corporation shall cause signboards with the words ‘Railroad Crossing’ distinctly painted on each side thereof in letters plainly legible, to be placed and constantly maintained at the side of highways and town ways where they are crossed at grade by such railroads, on posts or other struc *202 tures, in such position as to be easily seen by persons passing upon such ways ; . . (with provisions for sounding whistles and ringing bells under certain conditions).
“Sec. 74. Neglect of § 73; damages. — For unnecessarily neglecting to comply with any provision of the preceding section, the corporation forfeits not more than $500. Any person, whose duty it is to open or close such gates for the passage of an engine or traveler on a way, neglecting to do so forfeits not more than $50. The corporation is liable for damages for its neglect to comply with these provisions, or for the neglect of any agent or for the mismanagement of an engine, to be recovered in an action on the case by the person damaged thereby.”

The presiding justice in his charge to the jury summarized the plaintiff’s case as follows:

“In this case, as you will see by the plaintiff’s writ and as you have heard from the attorneys in argument, there are really three theories under which the plaintiff seeks to hold the defendant liable and responsible for her injuries.”
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“In the first place — Perhaps I don’t have these in the correct order, but in the first place, the plaintiff says that there is a statute, a law passed by the Legislature, which required a railroad corporation to erect a signpost to warn travelers of the fact that a crossing is near at every point where a town way or highway crosses the railroad track, and this statute makes the railroad liable to a person who is injured as a result if it does not have this signpost erected. That is the first theory.
“The second theory is that the crossing without a sign or without such protection as the plaintiff argues it should have is a nuisance — that is a word I will explain to you — and because it is a nuisance, the plaintiff says that the defendant is liable for maintaining that nuisance there. And, *203 thirdly, the plaintiff says that the defendant was negligent and that as a result of that negligence the plaintiff was injured.”

After discussing the three different theories the presiding justice continued:

“So, now you see that the distinction between the three theories of the plaintiff isn’t turning out to be very important from the standpoint of my charge to you because I am charging you that under whichever theory you consider — whichever one of those three theories — the conduct of the defendant fails to measure up to the standard required by law; so, under the theory of the statute I spoke of, the defendant didn’t comply with the statute; under the theory of the nuisance, the defendant did commit a public nuisance; under the theory of negligence, the defendant was negligent at law in so far as it didn’t have that signpost there.”
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“So, now, repeating perhaps, under whichever of the three theories you are considering, the question is, the conduct of the defendant not having been sufficient to meet the requirements of law, you have only to decide, first, was this conduct of the defendant that I speak of the proximate cause of the injury which the plaintiff received, and, secondly, was the plaintiff herself entirely free from any negligent conduct which in any way contributed to her injuries.”

In light of the statement of the theories on which the case was tried made by the presiding justice and to which no objection was made, we need not examine the pleadings to ascertain whether the theories are there adequately set forth.

Counsel for the defendant in their brief accurately say:

“For purposes of this appeal we must assume that in considering each of the Plaintiff’s counts the jury found that:
*204 “A. Defendant’s (1) negligence, (2) commission of a nuisance, and (3) violation of statutory duty, were each a proximate cause of the Plaintiff’s injury; and
“B. Plaintiff’s own negligence was a proximate cause of the injury.”

The parties stipulated that “There was sufficient evidence to support a jury’s finding that the Plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence if the court’s instructions to the jury regarding contributory negligence were correct as a matter of law.”

The third theory stated by the presiding justice was neither more nor less than the theory of the every day action for tort with freedom from contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff as an essential element. No claim otherwise is made by the plaintiff.

The first and second theories are directly related to the violation of the signboard statute, and do not fall into entirely separate compartments. The plaintiff urges that her contributory negligence does not bar recovery: first, under the signboard statute, and second, for damages arising from a public nuisance characterized by the plaintiff as an absolute nuisance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A.2d 739, 159 Me. 200, 1963 Me. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/runnells-v-maine-central-railroad-me-1963.