Higgins v. Public Service Railway Co.
Higgins v. Public Service Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for damages by reason of personal injuries sustained by her in a collision with an electric street railway car operated by the defendant company. Reversal is asked because of the refusal by the trial judge of defendant’s motions for nonsuit and for direction of a verdict. These motions were based solely upon the ground of contributory negligence.
The occurrence took place in the daytime, on Montgomery street, in Jersey City. This street runs approximately east and west, and there are double tracks, upon which ears run, of course in opposite directions. Factory street comes into Montgomery street from the north, but does not extend beyond it. Florence street crosses Montgomery street about two hundred feet to the eastward of Factory street. Cornelison avenue crosses Montgomery street about five hundred feet west of Factory street. The land on the southerly side of Montgomery street, extending from Cornelison avenue to Florence street, is unimproved, and its surface lies below the street level. There is no sidewalk upon the southerly side of Montgomery street at this place.
Plaintiff, a woman of mature years, had been visiting her brother at his home on the northeasterly corner of Montgomery
The parties waited together upon the sidewalk on the northeast corner of Factory and Montgomery streets until a westbound car appeared, slowed down, and stopped at Factory street. Mr. and Mrs. Higgins and the child proceeded to hoard it. While this car was slowing down, an eastbound car was observed at or about Cornelison avenue, and the plaintiff’s attention was called to it. She started to cross the street, but was obliged to wait a brief space for the slowly-moving westbound car to pass her, and she then walked behind this car and passed upon the eastbound track, and as she was about to step from the further rail of that track she was struck by the eastbound car. There was evidence justifying the inference that this ear was running at an excessively high rate of speed, that it was not under control, that it gave no warning of its approach by ringing a bell, and that the motorman was not keeping a reasonably careful lookout for persons crossing the street. The speed of the car was estimated as high as thirty miles an hour. 'There is a descending grade from Oornelison avenue to Factory street. The motorman testified that he was “coasting.” d’he nature of the plaintiff’s injuries tended to show that the impact of the collision was quite severe. And there was testimony to the effect that she was hurled, or partly hurled and partly carried, for a distance of sixty feet down the street, and that the car ran more than two hundred feet before being brought to a stop.
Plaintiff was found unconscious, and remained so for a long time. She testified that her memory of events from the time she left the sidewalk for the purpose of crossing the street until a time several days later was entirely obi iterated.
The evidence was clear and undisputed that she saw the eastbound car approaching before she started to cross the street. She herself testified that while she stood upon the sidewalk, and when the westbound car was so near that she could not cross in front of it, she saw the eastbound car com
Naturally, and unavoidably, her view of Montgomery street to the west was cut off while she passed behind the westbound car. The charge of contributory negligence is rested mainly upon the insistence that she ought to have looked up the street again after she passed beyond the point where the westbound car obstructed her view.
It is also suggested, rather than urged, that the loud noise made by the eastbound car (concerning which there was clear and undisputed evidence) was sufficient to warn the plaintiff of its near approach if she had been properly using her senses. But the jury might reasonably infer that this noise was merged in the noises made by the westbound car, just then gathering speed, so as to convey no separate, impression to the plaintiff’s ear. Therefore, whether the noise was such as to give her adequate warning was merely a jury question.
As to the other point, we think it does not conclusively appear that after' passing behind the westbound car the plaintiff failed to look to the right to observe the eastbound track for a sufficient distance to safeguard her against a car approaching thereon at customary and reasonably safe speed. There is no clear evidence upon the subject. Her own failure to testify about it is attributed to loss of memory, as already mentioned. The only witness who appears to have had plaintiff at the moment under observation was a Mrs. Coleman, who was looking from the window of a room in the upper part of a house on the northerly side of the street, and who was unable to say whether plaintiff looked or not. The mere fact that plaintiff was struck by the car is not conclusive proof that she did not, before stepping upon the eastbound track, look up -the street for a reasonable distance. Por, according to the evidence
It is argued that plaintiff was bound to choose a lime and place for making this observation so as to render the observation effective; that she was bound to wait until the westbound car had gone so far away that she could look for any required distance up the eastbound track. The law, however, does not require the traveler to insure himself against the clangers that beset him through the possible negligence of others; it only requires that he exercise reasonable care for Ids own safety; and, where looking and listening for danger arc called for, the law only requires that be exercise reasonable care to select the time when, and the position from which, the observation shall be made. Conkling v. Erie Railroad, Co., 31 Vroom 338, 312.
In the ease before us, the jury might reasonably infer that the plaintiff before leaving the westbound track made an observation by looking up the eastbound track; that at tbe time she tlius looked the westbound ear had proceeded far enough on its way to give her a view for a very considerable distance along the eastbound track; far enough, indeed, to have made it safe for her to cross except for the very high speed of the eastbound car; and that slie (having no notice of that excessive speed) went forward in reliance upon the observation thus made.
1 pon that state of facts, the decision of this court in Newark Passenger Railway Co. v. Block, 26 Vroom 605, is a controlling decision in her favor. There the plaintiff was struck and run over by an electric car running oil the westbound or northerly track in Springfield avenue in "Newark; when struck she was crossing the avenue from south to north on a crosswalk at the intersection of Prince street with the avenue; an eastbound ear running on the southerly ¡.rack had stopped upon the crossing, when she went on “looking both sides;” not seeing any westbound car, she stepped upon that track and
In that case, the foot-passenger had no knowledge whether a ear was or was not coming along the further track. In the present case the plaintiff, before she left the northerly sidewalk, saw that the eastbound car was coming, but under the circumstances we think this makes the ease the better for hgr. For when she thus saw the car it was about five hundred feet away. She testified that she did not observe how fast it was coming. This is not incredible, for it is a matter of common knowledge that one standing in or near the path of approach of a moving vehicle cannot readily estimate its Tate of speed. The event proved that even after the detention occasioned by waiting for the westbound car, she almost succeeded in crossing the street in safety; for she was struck just as she was stepping from the furthest rail. Accepting the evidence most favorable to her, that the eastbound ear covered the five hundred feet at the rate of thirty miles per hour, and supposing the jury to find that fifteen miles per hour was a reasonable limit of speed that the car should not have exceeded, and to find that the plaintiff was not called upon to anticipate any greater speed than this, two results follow: first, that the plaintiff exercised a reasonable judgment in undertaking to cross the street at the time she did, for upon what appeared to her she could cross before the car would come within two hundred and fifty feet of her; and secondly, that while she was waiting for the westbound car to clear her view of the eastbound track, and while she was looking up that track, she had reasonable ground for believing the eastbound ear was still a good deal more than two hundred and fifty feet distant, as it would have been had its rate of progress been such as she might reasonably attribute to it in the absence of notice of its extraordinary and excessive speed.
In that case, it is true, the evidence showed that the motorman saw or might have seen the plaintiff intending to cross; while in the case before us, the motonnan’s view of the plaintiff was interrupted by the intervening westbound car, as the plaintiff presumably knew. P>ut this does not, we think, prevent the application of the Glynn decision to the present case, for the plaintiff might reasonably assume that th.e motorman would see her as soon as the westbound car passed on, and still have time to check the speed of his car if necessary.
In Bauer v. North Jersey Street Railway Co., 45 Vroom 624, the plaintiff, a girl twelve years of age, undertook to cross a city street on which there were double trolley tracks; while crossing she awaited the passing of an eastbound car; a westbound car was approaching in full view at a distance of seventy-five to one hundred feet, which car she either saw or could have seen had she looked, and the motorman saw or could have seen her at the same distance. This .car struck her as she was about to step across the track upon which it ran. It was held erroneous to nonsuit upon the ground of contributory negligence.
Eagan v. Jersey City, &c., Railway Co., 45 Vroom 699, is distinguishable. In that case the plaintiff alighted from a trolley car, passed behind it, and proceeded to cross the ad
These decisions have not shaken the authority of Consolidated Traction Co. v. Glynn, supra, nor of Newark Passenger Railway Co. v. Block, supra.
In the case before ns, the trial judge properly refused'the motions for nonsuit and for direction of a verdict in defendant’s favor.
The judgment under review should be affirmed.
For affirmance — The Chancellor; Garrison, Swayze, Trenchard, Parker, Minturn, Bogert, Vredenburgh, Vroom, Congdon, JJ. 10.
For reversal — The Chief Justice, Bergen, Voorhees, Dill, JJ. 4
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KATHARINE A. HIGGINS, IN ERROR v. PUBLIC SERVICE RAILWAY COMPANY, IN ERROR
- Status
- Published