Citation Numbers: 26 N.Y.S. 397, 74 Hun 32, 81 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 32, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 208
Judges: Dykman
Filed Date: 12/1/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This action was here before upon an appeal from a judgment entered upon a verdict in favor of the defendant,, and we affirmed the judgment. 17 N. Y. Supp. 652. That judgment was reversed by" the court of appeals because the trial judge charged the jury that it was the duty of the defendant to blow the whistle or sound the bell 80 rods before reaching the highway,, and continue it at intervals until the crossing was passed, and if it failed to do that, and the- accident at the farm crossing was occasioned by that omission, the jury might find a verdict of negligence, the same as if the provision of the railroad act imposing an obligation to sound the bell or blow the whistle 80 rods before-reaching the crossing had never been repealed. 32 N. E. 636. It was also decided that the provision of the Penal Code devolving the duty of giving such signals upon the engineer imposed no duty upon the railroad company, and therefore the failure to give such signals cannot, as a matter of law, be regarded as a neglect of the-defendant. In the opinion of the court of appeals, Judge Peckham said:
“Of course, the companies still owe a duty to the public at such crossings, as elsewhere. That duty is to run their trains with care and caution, and when they cross such roads it may well be that the failure to give due warning by whistle or bell, or in some other way, would be held, under all the circumstances, to be. a failure to manage and run their train with proper care and caution, for'which they would be liable to a party injured.*398 if otherwise entitled to recovery. Even when compelled by statute to make such signals, it is- not necessarily a defense In all cases to prove that they were made. The making of the signals is the least a company can do, and in a given case it might not be enough. * * * It may be that evidence of the omission to give any signals for the highway crossing would not be admissible as bearing upon the question of defendant’s negligence in running its trains at the farm crossing, 2,000 feet distant. There are cases where evidence has been admitted, showing the absence of customary -signals at the places where usually they have been given, for the purpose of .proving negligence on the part of the company. Whether this was a case where evidence of this nature should be admitted in favor of this plaintiff, and with regard to the highway crossing, is a question not now necessary to decide. If the defendant were guilty of negligence in the manner of running its train over the farm crossing, it would be liable to a plaintiff otherwise entitled to recover. Upon a new trial all the facts can be shown which would enable the court or a jury to determine the question.”
The second trial was before a judge without a jury, and he decided in favor of the plaintiff, and from the judgment entered upon such decision the defendant has appealed to this court.
The trial judge found substantially as follows: That the defendant is a foreign corporation, and is the owner of the New York & New England Railroad. That along the line of its road it has a ■depot located at Fishkill village, at which depot the defendant’s trains were accustomed to stop, going in either direction; and that the defendant, since January, 1890, and prior thereto, established a custom of causing each and every of its engines to blow its whistle or ring its bell upon the approach to that depot in either •direction, whether the train stopped there or not. That there is, at right angles to such railroad, a farm crossing, known as “White’s Crossing,” which runs north and south, while the railroad from ■said depot towards said crossing runs in a westerly direction in a straight line; and that White’s crossing is located about 1,400 feet westerly from that depot. That the road of the defendant over the said crossing runs through a deep cut or excavation westerly, nearly from said station to and across the farm crossing. That by reason of said excavation there were high banks on either side of the defendant’s road over which the farm crossing passed, and the same continuing nearly from Fishkill station to and across the said farm crossing. That upon the southerly side of the defendant’s road, and upon and along the edge of the said bank, on the 16th day of August, 1890, and for a long time prior thereto, there were ■growing and permitted to remain upon said bank large quantities -of said brush wood and trees, which, together with the banks aforesaid, interfered with and obstructed the view of people passing ■over and along said farm crossing, which was on a level with the roadbed of the defendant, and obstructed the view of any train thereon running towards the west. That those obstructions were of such a character that they could have easily been removed by the defendant, and upon such removal the view of an approaching train from the west would be much better and much greater, and the removal of such obstruction would render it safer for persons ■crossing said railroad at said farm crossing. That the defendant had upon its road a train known as the “pay car.” That they had
A serious question in this case is whether evidence to show the absence of the customary signals at the station where such warnings are usually given was properly admissible. The court of appeals leave this question in abeyance, but state, as we have seen, that, if the defendant was guilty of negligence in running its trains over the farm crossing, it would be liable to a plaintiff otherwise entitled to recover. Inasmuch as there is small ground for attributing negligence to the deceased, the question is of paramount importance upon this appeal. In an action of this character it is usual and proper to prove all the facts and circumstances surrounding the occurrence, not to impose any duty upon the company which the law does not enjoin, but to lay before the jury the manner of operating the road. It is not the legal duty of a railroad company to maintain a flag at crossings, nor to remove obstructions to observation; and yet the absence of the former, and the presence of the latter, may always be proven upon the trial as bearing upon the general question involved. Casey v. Railroad Co., 78 N. Y. 518; McGrath v. Railroad Co., 63 N. Y. 528. So, conversely, it may be an insufficient defense to prove compliance with the- statutory regulations respecting' signals. Giving such signals does not under all circumstances relieve the company from the imputation of negligence. They are bound to use ordinary precaution to avoid collisions. Thompson v. Railroad Co., 110 N. Y. 636, 17 N. E. 690; Harty v. Railroad Co., 42 N. Y. 468. In the case of Casey v. Railroad Co., supra, proof was admitted to show that the defendant, previous to the accident, had been in the habit of keeping a flagman at that place, and that he was not there at the time, and it was held competent proof. We think that case analogous to this. Here the proof is that the custom was to give alarms on approaching the station, and the custom was not pursued at the time of the accident. We may assume, from the frequent use of the crossing by the deceased, that he was familiar with the custom of the company to give occasional signals when trains approach the station, and, that being so, the omission of the custom on this occasion may have lulled him .into security, and induced him to advance after looking and listening for signs of an approaching train, as he did. Sullivan v. Rail