Wise v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad

80 A. 459, 81 N.J.L. 397, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 A. 459 (Wise v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wise v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad, 80 A. 459, 81 N.J.L. 397, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 141 (N.J. 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, Chancellor.

This action was brought to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff, in the way of injuries to his person and the destruction of his horse and wagon, occasioned by a collision with a locomotive engine operated by the defendant company, at a highway crossing known as Strader’s crossing, in the county of Sussex. According to the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, the locomotive engine was not running on schedule time, was being driven backwards, and omitted to give the statutory signal of its approach to the crossing. This clearly made a prima facie case of negligence on the part of defendant.

The trial judge nonsuited the plaintiff on the ground of his contributory negligence, and the judgment thereon entered is now under review.

The occurrence took place between ten-thirty and eleven o’clock on a winter’s morning. Plaintiff was driving a single horse attached to a light buggy, with top raised and side curtains in place. The road upon which he was traveling leads in a northeasterly direction from Newton to the borough of Sussex, and crosses at about right angles the single-track railroad of defendant between Lafayette (which lies to the southeast) and Augusta (to the northwest). The highway enters a cut at a point distant approximately one hundred and eighty-five feet southwesterly from the railroad, and from this point until the traveler reaches a point about fifty feet from the track, the banks that form the sides of the cut prevent a view being had of the railroad in either direction, except at one place, not definitely located by the evidence, where there is an opening in the bank on the left. The road through the cut is narrow (about twenty-five feet) and its grade descends towards the crossing. At a point about fifty-five feet from the centre of the track the bank on the left falls away, but between this point [399]*399and the crossing the view of the railroad on that side was at the time in question further obstructed by a heap of ties that stood near the crossing, and perhaps to some extent interfered with by certain other heaps of ties that stood near the southwesterly side of the track, beginning at a point near the crossing and extending along the railroad for several hundred feet. According to the evidence the approaching traveler, on emerging from the cut, first had a clear view of the tracks to the left when he was at a point twenty-six feet from the centre of the track. On the right side of the road the embankment fell away and opened up the view to the approaching traveler at a point about forty-three feet from the centre of the track. In giving effect to these distances of twenty-six feet and forty-three feet, respectively, it is of course obvious that proper allowance must be made for the half of the width of the track, for the overhang of the locomotive engine beyond the rail, and for the distance from1 the driver’s position to the horse’s head (this latter, according to the evidence, was between twelve and fourteen feet), all of which tended to limit the space and reduce the time within which one driving along the highway must make such observation as he might after passing the obstructions and before his horse should come within reach of an approaching train.

Plaintiff had frequently traveled that way, and was quite familiar with the crossing and its immediate surroundings. It does not appear that before the accident he had precise and certain knowledge of the distances just referred to; these measurements were the result of a survey made afterwards. Plaintiff knew, however, that the crossing was a dangerous one. lie also knew, or at least had reason to believe, that a train from the southeast was about due at the time. He had no special reason for anticipating the coming of a train from the other direction—that is, from the left, the direction of Augusta.

As he approached the crossing he had, according to his testimony, no oppo] tunity for a view of the railroad in the direction of Lafayette before the highway entered the cut above mentioned. But at a point estimated by him as being about [400]*400two hundred and fifty feet from the crossing he had an extensive view of the railroad toward Augusta, and he there checked his horse for a moment, and looking in that direction he saw no train, although as he believed he could see the railroad for a distance of three-quarters of a mile to a mile. He testified that in this he was deceived; that from subsequent Observations he learned that certain bushjr willow trees that stood near to the southwesterly side of the railroad at a distance (according to the surveyor’s measurement) of one thousand on'e hundred and fifty-seven feet northwesterly from the crossing, interfered with the view of the railroad beyond. Seeing no train, he proceeded on his way, looking again to the left as he passed the gap in the embankment, and, still seeing nothing, he went forward to the crossing, his horse ambling at the rate of about seven miles per hour.

Prom the plaintiff’s testimony and from all the circumstances the jury might fairly infer that when he reached the immediate vicinity of the crossing he was satisfied—and reasonably so—from the observation previously made of the railroad in the direction of Augusta, that no train was coming from that side; that having as yet had no opportunity to look out for a train on the right, and having reason to expect a scheduled train from that direction, he concluded, and reasonably concluded, that it was most important for him to observe the track to the right at the first opportunity; that immediately upon emerging from the cut he attentively looked to the right and listened for a train, and that for this reason he failed to see, as soon as otherwise he. might have seen, the engine that was in fact coming from the left. He testified that he neither saw nor heard any train until he observed the locomotive coming upon him from the left at a distance of fifty or sixty feet. The engine struck the horse; the plaintiff was not struck, but was thrown from the wagon and seriously injured.

Two things, not as yet mentioned, may have had a tendency to further complicate the situation. The railroad as it comes from the direction of Lafayette has a slight curve, and it passes through a rock cut which terminates about' two hundred and fifty feet from the crossing.

[401]*401A reasonable explanation of tlie occurrence, as it seems to us, is that when the plaintiff arrived at this dangerous crossing without knowledge as to the. situation on his right, but with his mind impressed with the idea that a train was due from that direction, and at the same time resting under the impression, gained from his own observation, that no train was coming from the left (indeed, as it was a single-track railroad, the probability of a train coming from the right tended to negative tlie probability of a train coming from the opposite direction), emerging, as he did, from the narrow cut and having his view opened to tlie right a little sooner than a clear view could bo had to the left, the plaintiff naturally looked to the right side first; that as his view widened, and as his vision extended further and further along the track, he gazed in that direction ■—towards what he calls the "danger point”—so fixedly and attentively that he consumed the brief space of time available.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 A. 459, 81 N.J.L. 397, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-delaware-lackawanna-western-railroad-nj-1911.