DocketNumber: Appeal, 16
Judges: Rhodes, Hirt, Reno, Dithrioh, Arnold, Fine
Filed Date: 3/7/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued March 7, 1949. Plaintiff appeals from the refusal of the court below to take off the compulsory nonsuit entered in an action of trespass.
Giving the plaintiff the benefit of all reasonable inferences and deductions, his evidence established: At about midnight on a dark and misty night the plaintiff was driving his automobile along the Susquehanna river on a road which crossed defendant's tracks at grade. Plaintiff's car slipped off the edge of the road and stalled, the front wheels being against the rails of the defendant. The car could not be extricated by its own power, and plaintiff obtained the assistance of one Thomas, who lived nearby, but their efforts to move the car were unavailing. The front and rear lights of plaintiff's car were burning, but the automobile was at right angles to the rails, so that the rays of light were not reflected up or down the tracks. Plaintiff, seeing the reflection of the headlight of a train approaching from the direction of Tunkhannock, seized a flashlight and went toward the train approximately 150 yards, and attempted to "flag" it with the light. Likewise Thomas went up the tracks and waved a white handkerchief. Defendant's train rounded a curve which was "approximately 400 yards" from the grade crossing and the stalled car, for which distance the tracks were straight. The train was travelling approximately "50 miles per hour" and struck *Page 198 the automobile and came to a stop at a point 1000 feet beyond the grade crossing.
This was the sum total of plaintiff's proof of defendant's negligence.1 It was insufficient. This was not a case of an engineman having knowledge, — and sufficient time to act upon it, — that a vehicle had stopped or stalled upon a crossing which he was approaching. Cf. Tallman v. Reading Company,
Plaintiff asserts that Thomas attempted to call defendant's train dispatcher at Tunkhannock and talked to someone, warning him of the stalled automobile. But there is no testimony showing when the call was made with reference to the time of the accident, nor that it was made in time for the dispatcher at Tunkhannock to stop the train.
Order affirmed.