Knoll v. New Jersey Street Railway Co.
Knoll v. New Jersey Street Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case lias been tried three times, and each trial has resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The case arose out of an accident in which the plaintiffs wagon, which he was driving, was run into from the rear by a trolley car of the defendant company while traversing a public street in Newark. The points made for the defendant in support of the rule are — first, that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant company; second, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; third, that the damages were excessive, and fourth, that the verdict is contrary to the weight of evidence. This last point is to some extent involved in each of the other three and will he discussed in connection therewith.
There were two principal theories of the accident. The
The important variation from this statement that is contained in the testimony of the motorman is that his car was close behind the plaintiff’s wagon for some distance before the wagon started to turn across the track, and the plaintiff’s wagon, though not on the track, was so close to it that it was impossible for the ear to get by, and the motorman had been ringing his bell a number of times in order to cause the plaintiff to turn out and malee-room for him to pass; that plaintiff, instead of turning out, turned in to go across the track, and that the accident occurred in that way. It was admitted that plaintiff was somewhat deaf in the left ear, and that the car struck no part of the wagon but the right hind wheel.
Of these two stories the jury was entitled to select the one that seemed to them, in view of all the evidence and all the probabilities in the case, most likely to be true, and we think that, assuming that they selected the second version, the one given by the motorman, there was enough in that version, taken in connection with the surrounding circumstances, to justify the jury both in finding that there was negligence on the part of the motorman and in failing to find that there was contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. From the facts alone that the motorman saw the wagon ahead and realized that he could not pass it, followed it up closely so as to get by if room were made, and so operated his car either as to speed or proximity to the wagon that when finally the wagon turned across in front of him, the car struck no part of it except the right hind wheel, thus indicating that it
Nor does contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff appear either as a matter of law, or, in our judgment, by weight of evidence. On this theory of the case which, as we have already said, the jury were fully justified in adopting, the plaintiff was driving so close to the track that the car could not pass it; it is fair to infer that he knew this; and his legal status, as he drove from Howard street lor a distance of one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet close alongside of the right-hand track, was substantially the same as if he had been driving actually on the track, as in the case of Ball v. Camden, and Trenton Railway Co., 47 Vroom 539, the latest pronouncement of tlie Court of Errors and Appeals on this subject; it was therefore not contributory negligence in law to fail to keep a lookout behind him for cars, and we think it was a jury question whether it was such negligence to turn to the left across the track instead of to the right away from it. The ease, in our judgment, is distinguishable from Harbison v. Camden and Suburban Railway Co., 45 Id. 252. In that case the plaintiff was riding on a bicycle close to the right-hand rail and turned suddenly and without any warning and without looking to see whether any car was coming, and was struck just as he got upon the track. That the plaintiff in the case at bar, (having a horse and wagon, was enabled to turn not only upon the track but to progress so far that the entire horse and wagon were safely across with the exception of the right hind wheel, might well have satisfied the jury in connection with the other circumstances of the case that Ms failure to look back before turning to cross, while perhaps negligent, was not such negligence as contributed to the accident; in other words, that if he had looked back and had seen the car lie would still have been justified in taking precisely the course that he did take.
The rule to show cause will therefore be discharged.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.