Yergy v. Helena Light & Railway Co.

102 P. 310, 39 Mont. 213, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 83
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1909
DocketNo. 2,647
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 102 P. 310 (Yergy v. Helena Light & Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yergy v. Helena Light & Railway Co., 102 P. 310, 39 Mont. 213, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 83 (Mo. 1909).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE SMITH

delivered the opinion of the court.

These are appeals from a judgment entered on the verdict of a jury, and from an order denying a new trial, in a case in which Mary Alice Yergy, as executrix, the plaintiff, was awarded damages in the sum of $40,000 on account of the alleged negligence of the defendants, the Helena Light and Railway Company and Stephen Peterson, its motorman, resulting in the death of plaintiff’s husband, George .0. Yergy, a lumber dealer in the city of Helena. The death occurred on December 1, 1906, and resulted from a collision between one of the defendant company’s street railway cars propelled by electricity, which was being operated by Peterson, and a buggy drawn by a single horse, in which buggy the deceased, Yergy, was attempting to cross the railway tracks at the intersection of Lyndale and Benton avenues. The com[223]*223plaint alleges that Peterson “did not keep any lookout for persons or vehicles who were then approaching or crossing the tracks; nor did he have said car under sufficient, or any, control, so as to avoid injuring travelers passing over the railway tracks; nor did the defendant stop said car in time to avoid injuring Yergy, but, on the contrary, the said street-ear was then and there by the defendants run at a high, negligent and dangerous rate of speed, and far in excess of that allowed by law, - whereby the said car was propelled and driven with great violence at and against the vehicle in which Yergy then and there was, and the said vehicle was upset and thrown over, and the said Yergy was thrown thereout and east upon the ground, after which, and by reason of the careless and negligent management and operation of said car, said Yergy was drawn and dragged by the same over and along the ground, and over and along the railway tracks, for a great distance, and was drawn and dragged under the wheels of said car, and the same were then and there run and driven over him, whereby he was then and there crushed and killed.” Then follows an allegation that the defendants, in so running the car and causing the death of Yergy, “acted in a willfully and recklessly negligent manner, and without any regard to their duty in the premises, and without any regard to the safety, rights, and life of said Yergy.” The complaint also contains .the allegation that “deceased left no children or other heirs dependent upon him, save and except the' plaintiff. ’ ’ The defendants denied negligence on their part, and alleged (1) that the proximate cause of the death of Yergy was his own negligence; and (2) that he was guilty of contributory negligence.

The first complaint made by the appellants is this: That the court erred in allowing plaintiff’s witness, Samuel M. Boss, to testify as to the distances within which a street-car could be stopped, under certain circumstances, when going at different rates of speed. The witness had testified that he was inspector of railways for the State Bailway Commission, and had had eight years’ experience in the railroad business; that he had acted as [224]*224a street-car conductor for about three months, but had never been a motorman; that he had taken a motorman’s place several times, and had stopped electric ears; that he had observed the speed of cars and the stopping of ears, and had some knowledge of the space in which ears running by electricity could be stopped. He said he had never stopped a car in an emergency, and had never seen the ear which caused the accident, but that “he was in a position to tell the court in what space a car could be stopped” under the circumstances narrated in the question propounded to him. We think there was no prejudicial error in the ruling complained of. The competency of the witness was a matter for the court to decide, and one in which its discretion could properly be exercised. We find no abuse of discretion, and in addition, other witnesses for the plaintiff testified to the same general import, and the testimony of Ross in effect was cumulative.

In order to properly illustrate the other propositions of law involved, it seems necessary to set forth a portion of the testimony. John Edgerton, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he was in a cab on Lyndale avenue, which is a street of average travel, on the evening in question; that at some distance east of the intersection of Lyndale and Benton avenues the cab passed a buggy, in which the deceased Yergy was riding. The cab was going at the rate of from six to seven miles an hour. As the cab passed the buggy, the horse attached to the buggy began to trot. There was an arc light at the intersection of the two avenues, and the street-ear could be seen approaching for many hundred feet south of the intersection of the two streets. The cab had reached a point approximately one hundred feet west of the railroad track, when the witness looked out to see if the approaching car would stop at Lyndale avenue. At that time the car was running at the rate of about twenty-two miles an hour. Witness first saw the car approaching when it was at a point about four hundred feet south of the intersection of the two streets. He heard the gong of the street-car sounding. When the car was at a point from fifty to one hundred feet [225]*225south of the intersection of the railroad track and the roadway of Lyndale avenue, there was a succession of strokes on the gong. Witness and the driver of the cab, learning that a collision had taken place, returned to the point on Benton avenue where the car was stopped. Mr. Yergy at that time was lying across the track, with his head on the rail between the two west wheels of the forward truck of the car. He appeared to be dead. The ear stopped at a point about eighty-seven feet north of the intersection of the two avenues. The car was illuminated, and was easily visible. There was introduced in evidence an ordinance of the city of Helena, prescribing that the rate of speed for street-ears at the point in question should not exceed twelve miles per hour.

Nathan Godfrey, an insurance agent, testified that his company would charge for an annuity of $5,000 per annum, for a man forty-nine years of age, for the balance of his life, the sum of $71,800.

Ben. Hay, the cab driver, testified that, when the car stopped, the front wheel of the forward truck was off the track; that Mr. Yergy did not look around when the cab passed his buggy, and paid no attention at all to the cab as it passed.

Amos Shelladay, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he was a former employee of the defendant company; that he knew the car in question; that for a couple of hundred feet south of the intersection of Lyndale and Benton avenues the street car track was practically level; that under the conditions existing on the night in question the car could have been stopped in the space of twenty feet, going at the rate of eight miles an hour; that at the rate of twelve miles an hour it ought to be stopped in practically the same distance, and, going at the rate of eighteen or twenty miles an hour, the car could be stopped in fifty feet. J. W. Ludwick substantially corroborated Shelladay.

J. B. Sanford testified that he had known deceased for twenty years; that he was in the planing-mill and lumber-yard business, and witness at one time conducted a similar business for a •period of thirty-five years; that he had a great deal of business [226]*226with Mr. Yergy, and “could tell his capacity as a business man was first-class, particularly as to the kind of business he was conducting. In my judgment his earning capacity prior to his death was worth $5,000 a year.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P. 310, 39 Mont. 213, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yergy-v-helena-light-railway-co-mont-1909.