Schnell v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

1 N.W.2d 56, 71 N.D. 369, 1941 N.D. LEXIS 179
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1941
DocketFile 6711
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1 N.W.2d 56 (Schnell v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schnell v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 1 N.W.2d 56, 71 N.D. 369, 1941 N.D. LEXIS 179 (N.D. 1941).

Opinion

Nuessle, J.

This action was brought to recover damages suffered by the plaintiff in a railroad crossing accident. The case was tried to a jury and defendants had a verdict. Judgment was entered thereon. *372 Thereafter plaintiff moved for a new trial. The motion was granted. Whereupon defendants perfected the instant appeal.

Plaintiff predicates his cause of action on negligence on the part of the defendants in that there was no light or no adequate light on the rear of the tender of the engine that collided with his car; that the whistle was not blown or the bell rung as the engine approached the crossing; that the crossing was a dangerous one over a much used highway and there "was no warning light or other device to notify the public of it; and that the railway company failed to post a flagman at the crossing to warn travelers when a train was approaching. The defendants, answering the plaintiff’s complaint, denied any negligence on their part and further alleged that such damage and injury, if any, as the plaintiff suffered were on account of his own contributory negligence in failing to exercise due care in approaching the crossing and attempting to pass thereover.

We first state facts shown on the record at the close of the plaintiff’s case and concerning which there is no controversy: The plaintiff is a farmer and a stockbuyer. In carrying on his business he frequently goes to Fargo. The defendant, Northern Pacific Railway Company, owns and operates a railway running east and west through the city of Fargo. The defendants Viets and Robideau are members of the crew of the train which collided with the plaintiff’s automobile. The railway company maintains a Y on the west side of Fargo, the east leg of which crosses U. S. Highway No. 10, just within the city limits and at the point where a city street, 23rd Street, running north and south, intersects the highway at right angles. H. S. Highway No. 10 runs east and west, parallel with the main line of the railway. The Y crosses this highway from the northeast to the southwest at an angle of about 45 degrees. The railway company uses this Y for turning cars, for switching from its main to a branch line, and for making connections with the Milwaukee Railway. The Y is not greatly used. The crossing within the city limits is marked by regular railroad (cross-buck) signs, one on each side of the highway just west of the crossing and on the west side of 23rd street. There is also a sign on the north side of the highway some 400 feet east of the crossing. There is no gate, warning bell or light at the crossing, and no flagman was posted there to warn travelers of approaching trains on' the night of the acci *373 dent. The terrain thereabouts is flat. The highway and the Y are on the same level. About 150 feet east of where the east leg of the Y crosses the highway and south of it, there is a gasoline filling station ■operated by one McNally. This is the first building to the east. There .are no buildings near the Y to the west. The view from the highway for a distance of more than 300 feet east from the crossing down along the east leg of the Y is unobstructed. The photograph, Exhibit 9 herewith, shows the crossing as of the time of the accident. This photograph was taken with the camera 200 feet east of the crossing, facing .southwesterly in the direction whence the train came. It shows the highway, the east leg of the Y where it crosses the highway, and the track southwesterly from the crossing.

Plaintiff’s testimony further is that on September 24, 1938, he was in Fargo. About eight o’clock in the evening he set out in his 1938 Ford sedan to return home, driving west on Highway No. 10. He was accompanied by Mrs. Kuntz, a friend of his family. The night was clear, but it was quite dark as he drove toward the crossing. He had *374 driven over this highway a good many times and knew where the crossing was. The weather was cool. The windows of the car were lowered four or five inches from the top. Plaintiff knew he was approaching the crossing and, on that account, looked and listened, but neither saw any train on the line nor heard any bell or whistle. The traffic is heavy on the highway at this time of the night. Plaintiff says there was a continuous string of cars close together coming from the west. They had their lights on and he was blinded by them. Several of them passed" him when he was 15 or 20 feet from the crossing. And there were cars going west ahead of him. The nearest was about 100 feet ahead. Plaintiff was driving on the north side of the paved portion of the highway at 15 to 20 miles an hour. His brakes were in good condition and he could have stopped the car instantly had he tried to do so. The pavement was 20 feet in width. He could see down his own lane but could not see to the south on account of the glare of the cars coming from the west. Without slowing down he continued on over the crossing. Just as he passed over the railway track he was struck by something which he later learned was the rear end of the tender of a switch engine, backing up the T from the southwest and prilling seven cars. His car was shoved along the track ahead of the tender. He was very seriously injured and his car was badly wrecked.

Mrs. Kuntz, called by the plaintiff, testified that she was unac•quainted with this highway and did not know of the crossing. She did mot see the engine until after the accident; nor did she hear any bell or whistle. Her testimony with respect to the speed at which plaintiff •was driving, to the cars ahead going west, and those coming from the .west with their lights burning brightly, is to the same effect as that of the plaintiff.

There were several persons at McNally’s filling station at the time ;of the accident. Chester Baker, employed at the station, testified he observed the plaintiff as he drove past the filling station, and that he-was then driving about 25 miles per hour. He recognized the plaintiff, who had been a customer at the station where Baker had waited upon him at various times. There were no cars passing east between the plaintiff and the station at the time Baker saw him, though a number had passed a moment before. At this time of the day cars pass over this railroad crossing at an average of two per minute, but when plain-, tiff drove by there wa,s no traffic from the west in front of the oil station *375 —it was slowing clown for the train. Baker saw the collision. The tender pushed the plaintiff’s car 30 feet from the center of the pavement along the track and onto the shoulder of the highway. At the time Baker saw the plaintiff, and at the time of the accident, he was engaged in servicing the car of one of his customers, Koltes by name. He was talking with Koltes when he heard the engine whistle a continuous blast. He remembers hearing it because it was so loud that it was difficult to carry on the conversation. When he heard the whistle he looked down the Y and saw the engine and cars approaching. He could them plainly. They were about 150 feet away. He did not anticipate a collision. He did not hear any bell ringing. There was a lighted switch engine light on the rear of the tender.

Koltes, the customer whose car Baker was servicing, testified that at the time in question he was sitting in his car facing north, with his-feet on the running board. The traffic on the highway was as usual. It was dark and the cars had their lights on.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.W.2d 56, 71 N.D. 369, 1941 N.D. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schnell-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-nd-1941.