Carbaugh v. Philadelphia & Reading Railway Co.
Carbaugh v. Philadelphia & Reading Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This suit arose out of the accident referred to and described in the opinion in Wingert v. Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company, herewith filed. Plaintiff is the husband of Mrs. Carbaugh, one of the victims of the accident, who was riding in the automobile driven by Wingert, the plaintiff in the case above mentioned. She occupied the rear seat of the car, with two other women and a child. Defendant contends deceased failed in her duty to look and listen for an approaching train, and thereby joined with the driver in testing a danger certainly apparent to her had she exercised due care. The verdict in the action by the driver of the automobile against this defendant, which was tried with the present suit, establishes the fact that he stopped, looked and listened and that no train at the time was within sight or hearing; hence, there was no manifest danger to test. Assuming, however, deceased saw or was bound to see the approaching train at the moment it rounded the curve, the driver also saw it, and there was neither oc
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Carbaugh v. Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Negligence — Railroads—Automobile-—Collision—Grade crossing ■ — -Death of passenger in automobile — Former recovery by driver of automobile — Contributory negligence of passenger — Imputed negligence — Interference with driver — Increase of danger — Case for jury. 1. In an action to recover for death of plaintiff’s wife, a passenger seated in the tonneau of an automobile at the time of its collision with a train at a railroad grade crossing, she could not be declared guilty of contributory negligence in joining with the driver in testing a manifest danger where there was a verdict in favor of the driver of the automobile in his action against the defendant tried with the present case, such verdict establishing the fact that the driver stopped, looked and listened and that no train was in sight or hearing. 2. In such case, assuming deceased saw or was bound to see the approaching train, since the driver also saw it there was no necessity for interference by her with the operation of the car, as such interference might only have served to increase the danger.