McClure v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.
McClure v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for the killing of a pair of horses, the destruction of a set of harness and the breaking of the pole of a surrey, which resulted from his team, driven by his employee, coming into collision with an express train of the defendant company, at a grade crossing. The team, in charge of plaintiff’s driver, approached the crossing from the north and the express train of the defendant company approached from the west side of the crossing. There was a cut upon the north side of the railroad, and the bank upon that side was, at the point of intersection of the right of way of the defendant company, with the west side of the public road, twelve feet higher than the top of the rail of the track of the defendant company. The public road from the north approached the track through a cut which extended back a considerable distance north from the railroad, through this higher ground on that side. The plaintiff had employed an engineer to make a survey and map of the locality, and that engineer was called as
There was a conflict of evidence as to whether the employees of the defendant company had given any signal, by the blowing of whistle or ringing of bell, of the approach of the train to the crossing. Several witnesses for the plaintiff testified that they had, for various reasons, been listening for such signal and that none was given, while a number of witnesses called by the defendant positively testified that they had heard the usual whistle of the locomotive. If this had been the only question involved the case would properly have been left to the jury. The question of the contributory negligence of the agent of the plaintiff, the driver of the team, was, however, squarely raised by the testimony produced by the plaintiff. That evidence established that the night when the accident occurred was dark, but it also established that the headlight of the locomotive drawing the train, with which the team of the plaintiff came into collision, was burning, and that that headlight would have been plainly visible, from a point on the public road sixteen feet north of the track, at all times after the train arrived at a point one mile to the westward of the crossing until it reached the crossing, if persons about to cross the track had stopped and looked for approaching trains. The only witness who saw the accident was the agent of the plaintiff, the driver of the team. He testified that the night was very dark, that he approached the crossing from the north and when he arrived at the cross roads 800 feet from the crossing he stopped, looked and listened for approaching trains, and that from this place, where he first stopped he could have seen a train upon the tracks, for a dis
The whole duty of one about to cross the tracks of a steam railroad at grade is not in all cases discharged by his stopping, looking and listening for the approach of a train. He must stop at a proper place and when he proceeds he should continue to look and to observe the precautions which the danger of the situation requires. He should stop again if there is another place nearer the tracks from which he can better discern whether there is danger. When the driver of the plaintiff stopped to look and listen for approaching trains at a point 800 feet from the crossing he could, if his own testimony is to be believed, see only such trains as were then within a quarter of a mile of the crossing. It is manifest that this precaution was wholly insufficient; he could not have seen a train which was only twice as far from the crossing as he himself would have to travel before reaching the crossing. The witness testified that he drove slowly. If he drove at the rate of four miles an hour, a train running at forty miles an hour, as trains frequently do in the open country, must have been over a mile and a half from the crossing, at the time he started to drive this 800 feet, in order to reach the crossing at the same time he there arrived. The duty of those about to pass a grade crossing is to look for trains at a time when they may reasonably expect to see a train which may reach the crossing before they have passed over. Having stopped at this long distance from the crossing the driver proceeded without again looking or listening to a point in the cut in the public road where he again stopped, but where according to his own testimony the only part of the track on which he could see a train was quite a distance down and he could not see trains near the crossing. Having stopped at this point where he could not have seen trains with which there was danger of his coming into collision he proceeded without attempting to stop at a point sixteen feet from the track where he could have had a clear view of a train a full mile to the westward. Having stopped at a point where he could not see a train
The employee of the plaintiff, the only witness who testified that he saw the accident, did not undertake to say that the team had reached the crossing before it was struck by the engine. He testified that when the horses’ heads were eight or nine feet from the track he first saw the train, that the horses reared and jumped towards the track or, as he said in cross-examination, towards the train; that the train ran on to the crossing and the next thing he knew he was out of the surrey in which he had been seated. Undisputed evidence of a number of witnesses established that after the accident the surrey remained standing in the road with its hind wheels almost in the wagon tracks of the public road and the front wheels turned slightly to the eastward, and the only injury to the surrey was that the point of the pole was broken. The horses were both killed, but the body of one was found in the public road and that of the other a few feet to the east of it, both upon the north side of the railroad track. All the evidence for the plaintiff indicated that the horses had run into the side of the train, and this was corroborated by the testimony of the employees of the defendant and the marks found on the side of the tender; baggage car and smoking car of the train. Four absolutely disinterested witnesses testified that immediately after the accident the driver had declared that the horses had taken fright near a point where there was a bend in the public road, about 175 feet from the track, and had run off, that he could not control them and that they ran into the side of the train. The driver, it is true, denied that he had made any such declarations as these, and the case might have had to go to the jury if the evidence produced by the plaintiff had presented a case which did not of itself disclose the contributory negligence of his driver. The cases, however, in which a railroad company can be called upon to pay for runaway teams which dash against the sides of its cars, merely because the trains fail to get over a crossing and out of the way before the runaway horses reach it, must certainty remain exceptional.
The judgment is reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- McClure v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company
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- 1 case
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- Syllabus
- Negligence — Railroads—“Stop, look and listen” — Grade crossing. Where a driver of a team on approaching a railroad grade crossing stops to look and listen for a train at a point where he cannot see trains near the crossing, and then starts and drives directly on, although he could by stopping at a point sixteen feet from the track, have had a clear view of any train which was within a mile of the crossing, and the undisputed evidence is that the horses ran into the side of the train and were killed, the driver is guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and no recovery can be had from the railway company for the loss of the horses.