Woodworth v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

55 A.D. 23, 66 N.Y.S. 1072
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 55 A.D. 23 (Woodworth v. New York Central & Hudson River 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
Woodworth v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 55 A.D. 23, 66 N.Y.S. 1072 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinions

Hirschberg, J.:

The plaintiff’s husband was killed upon a public highway while crossing the defendant’s tracks at Montrose Station On the night of December 24, 1896, by an express train from the south, which came upon him around an abrupt curve just below the highway and without a signal from bell or whistle or any other warning. The fact of the defendant’s negligence was scarcely in dispute. The defendant offered no evidence. All.the witnesses whose attention was directed to the subject testified that the whistle was not blown or the bell rung, and the engineer in charge of the engine at the time, although called as a witness by the plaintiff to prove the collision, was not required by the defendant to refute the fact that no warning signal was given of the approach of his train. There were no gates at the crossing, no flagman and no lights.

■ The defendant, however, relies upon the fact that as there' was no eye witness of the occurrence there can be no recovery, on the theory that the deceased by looking in the direction from which it came might have seen the train in time to avoid the accident, and, therefore, was chargeable with contributory negligence as matter of-law.. The facts of the case, however, bring it within an unbroken line of authorities in this State, to the effect that the question of the negligence of the deceased was, under the circumstances, one of fact, and was, therefore, properly submitted to the jury by the learned trial court. No exception was taken to the charge.

The deceased lived at Montrose, West of the railroad, and at the time of his death was on his way from the station, which is just west of the tracks, to a stable a short distance east of the railroad. The night was dark and very cold, and the planking which constituted the highway where it crossed the tracks was icy and slippery, because of spray thrown thereon by defendant’s engines in taking water - without stopping, at adjacent watertroughs sunk between the rails. There was some snow on the ground, and one witness thought it was snowing at the time, but was not sure. The highway at the crossing bears to the north or away from the direction from ■ which the train approached. There were five tracks to cross, a. south-bound [25]*25switch, the south-bound main, the north-bound main and two northbound switches. On the south-bound switch and on one of the north-bound switches there were freight trains standing, but broken so as to leave the crossing clear. One witness testified that there were trains on the three switch tracks, which, if true, would necessarily occupy both north-bound switches, and to that extent increase the obstructions to the view of a train coming around the curve spoken of. A few minutes before the accident a witness noticed that the engine of the freight train on the south-bound switch was moving around, just below or south of the crossing, making some noise occasioned by the revolving of the wheels and steam escaping, he said as “ is usual from an engine.”

The precise location of the curve south of the crossing does not appear, its distance from the crossing being stated but indefinitely. It does appear that the curve was a sharp one, and bore toward the east. There was also evidence from which the jury was entitled to conclude that the curve was so close to the crossing that a train traveling twenty-five miles an hour, which was the speed of the one in question, would reach the crossing in a very few seconds after turning the curve. The only estimate of the distance from the crossing to the commencement of the curve was given by the defendant’s station agent at Montrose, who testified on cross-examination that he should judge the curve commenced 500 or 600 feet below the crossing. It is not entirely clear whether he was referring to the northern or the southern end of the curve, in view of the fact that on his direct examination he .had testified that it was “ an abrupt curve a few yards south ” of the crossing. It is not customary to refer to hundreds of feet as a few yards, and the jury may very well have regarded his original statement as the more accurate, especially in view of the fact of his employment by the defendant, and the fact that no evidence was offered by the defendant of the exact measurement, or any other specific proof of how far a train from the south would be visible to a person on the crossing. Another witness testified that from a “ little raise ” of ground on which he was standing he coüld see the track below the station, and also below a pickle house south of it, and could also see the light in a railroad tower about 4,000 feet below. But he was located at a [26]*26considerable distance to the west of the station, and where he could command a view of the curve spoken of, assuming it to be but a “ few yards ” below the crossing. No accurate measurement was-given of the distance below the crossing at which a train would, be visible, and no witness testified how far a train could be seen from any portion of the railroad property or tracks. It did appear, however, that the deceased traveled less than sixty feet in going from the' station to the place where he was struck, during the greater part of which space the track to the south' was obstructed, or he was where care would require him to look in the opposite direction; and a witness who had crossed just ahead of him and-in the same direction, David Anderson, but who did not see the deceased, testified that he had gotten only about three rods east of the train at the time it passed- the crossing, although when he was [jassing over the northbound track he did not see it. He heard the train approaching after he got across the tracks, but did not actually see it until it reached the crossing.

. The deceased must have been -struck when clear, or nearly clear, of the rails of the north-bound track, for he was found lying diagonally, close to, and east of -that track, between it and the first north-, bound switch, near a mail crane which was a foot and a half or two. feet north of the crossing. His hat and one boot were missing from the body, and the injuries consisted of a large scalp, wound, laceration of the external ear, fracture of the left temporal bone,, and fracture of the legs just above the knee. His hat was found on the engine when the' train reached Poughkeepsie, and the glass in one of the engine markers was found to be broken. The train was ten minutes late, passing Montrose at about six-seventeen o’clock, and the deceased was last seen at the depot, whence he endeavored-to cross the tracks at about six-fifteen. He had been in the employ ■of the defendant, but was not at the time of the accident, was an educated, temperate man, forty-five years old, of good physical capacity, with good eyesight and hearing, and careful and cautious in disposition and temperament.

•From the evidence, including a map of the locality drawn-to a scale, I think the deceased must have had about thirty feet" of icy planking to walk from the point where he first emerged from the broken freight train on the south-bound switch to the place where [27]*27he was struck. Assuming that he could walk that distance on the ice in about the same time that Anderson walked three rods, or about fifty feet beyond the planking where the footing was secure, it would seem to be clearly established that, at the time the deceased first arrived at a point where he could look to the south, the train in question was not in sight.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 A.D. 23, 66 N.Y.S. 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodworth-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-nyappdiv-1900.