Wiedman v. Erie Railroad

66 A.D. 347, 72 N.Y.S. 683
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 A.D. 347 (Wiedman v. Erie Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiedman v. Erie Railroad, 66 A.D. 347, 72 N.Y.S. 683 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.:

This action is brought by plaintiff to recover for personal injuries-sustained by him in the village of Tonawanda December 21, -1897, by reason of a collision with one of defendant’s passenger trains,, and which collision it is claimed by him resulted from the negligence'of said defendant in the operation of said train without any concurring or contributing negligence upon luis part. At the close of all of the evidence defendant’s counsel moved for a direction- of a-verdict, and this motion was granted, it not appearing, whether the-same was so granted because of supposed absence of negligence upon the part of the defendant, or of the presence of negligence upon the part of the plaintiff.

Beyond any question or necessity of discussion, the jury; would have been entitled, amongst others, to find the following facts:

The tracks of the defendant run through the village of Tonawanda in substantially a northerly and southerly direction. Robinson street, where the accident occurred, crosses them' substantially in an easterly and westerly direction. Some considerable distance south of the highway crossing is the depot. Commencing from the east, which is the direction from which plaintiff approached' upon' the occasion in question, the' first track was that known as the Lock-port branch, and it was upon this that the accident occurred. Shortly before this track crosses Robinson street from the south it-[349]*349makes a curve towards the east. The next track was what was known as the scales ” track, and this was about twenty-five feet west of the Lockport branch, from which it divides at a short distance south of the crossing. The next track beyond this was the .main track running through to Niagara Falls, and beyond that was still another track.

The plaintiff, who was a joiner and carpenter by trade, had been_ engaged in connection with his business easterly of defendant’s tracks during the afternoon of the day in question. Sometime after five o’clock he came to Georke’s saloon, which was upon the southerly side of Robinson street and east from the Lockport track between eighty and ninety feet. He stopped there a few minutes, and then about five-forty or five-forty-five started to go home across the tracks in question. He was driving a lumber or democrat wagon with one horse attached. The horse was a gentle one. The plaintiff sat upon a board laid across the box of his wagon, the seat being about four feet from the ground and plaintiff’s head about six feet therefrom. He had in his wagon some tools and other things which may have made some noise. As he approached the tracks his horse was upon a walk. Twice between Georke’s and the railroad tracks he listened and looked both ways for a train; the last time being when his horse was within about three feet of the Lockport track. It-was dark or growing dark. As he approached the tracks he heard an engine somewhere off the crossing letting off steam. As he got upon the Lockport track a freight train upon the scale ” track moved down upon or towards the crossing and he stopped. Just then, looking again towards the south, he saw, the passenger train which struck him coming around the curve at a distance of perhaps ■one hundred and twenty feet. Its headlight was lighted, but it had given no signal of its approach by whistle or bell. When it was within perhaps fifty feet of him it gave some sharp blasts of the whistle. He endeavored to get his horse off the Lockport track and in between that and the “ scale ” track so as to avoid a collision, but was not successful, his wagon being struck and he being injured. The passenger train was going at the rate of eighteen or twenty miles per hour.

As stated, there can be no doubt but that a jury would have been entitled to find all of the aforesaid facts. Some of them, notably [350]*350the alleged failure of the defendant to give signals of the approach of this train and the rate of speed, were disputed. But the issues thus raised were fairly within the province of a determination by the jury.

We come now to the .discussion of an alleged obstruction to the view of defendant’s train formed by a bank situated in the angle south of Robinson street and east of the Lockport track. The extent of this obstruction is very largely decisive of the question, both of 'defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s freedom from negligence, and the defendant insists strenuously that upon all of the evidence it was not of such a nature as to permit the jury to find in favor of the plaintiff upon those questions.

This bank (referring especially to the evidence of the plaintiff and one Barrally, a civil engineer, and one of plaintiff’s witnesses), west of Goerke’s saloon and towards the railroad track, was between four and five feet above the level of the roadway of Robinson street, becoming higher as one went westerly towards the railroad track, the highest point being ten or fifteen feet from the track. It extended to within eight or nine feet of the track and then sloped down some. On top of this bank, between the saloon and the track, was an outbuilding fifteen by nine feet, some trees and a, thick growth of brush or weeds from two to four feet high, which continued about the entire space.

The witness Barrally, in answer to the questions of defendant’s counsel, éxpressed the opinion that, these, trees or hushes would SO' interfere with seeing down the track towards the direction from which défendant’s train was coming as to have prevented plaintiff from seeing the train upon the occasion in question until it got within a very short distance of the crossing. One of plaintiff’s witnesses (Gust), who sometimes drove a. hose cart, testified, upon his cross-examination by defendant’s counsel, that he could see the top of a train, the smoke stack and headlight upon a train, coming as the one did in question, when he got by Goerke’s saloon; that he thought the obstructions in question were about seven feet high, but that upon the seat which he occupied upon the hose cart his, head was about eight feet above the ground.

Plaintiff swears directly and positively that this bank and obstructions upon the night in question did prevent him from seeing the [351]*351approaching train; that he .looked twice before he got upon the track and did not see it. There is much other evidence upon this subject both by plaintiff and by deféndant; that upon the part of the latter, both through the oral evidence of witnesses and in the form of photographs and measurements, tends to belittle and minimize the extent of this obstruction. It is claimed, however, apon the part of the plaintiff, that between the time of the accident and the time of the making of the photographs and measurements, this bank had been cut down more or less in the neighborhood of the tracks and that the photographs do not adequately or fairly represent the extent of the obstructions as they were at the time of the accident.

Taking all of the evidence, we think it made a question for the jury whether the plaintiff, in the exercise of that degree of diligence and caution which the law imposed upon him as he approached the track, ought to have seen and known of the approach of the train in time to have avoided it.

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Bluebook (online)
66 A.D. 347, 72 N.Y.S. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiedman-v-erie-railroad-nyappdiv-1901.