Court Opinion

ID: 9304343
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:15:24.553418+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:49.820108
License: Public Domain

J. B. McPIiERSON, District Judge.
I have no doubt that suffb eient evidence was offered in this case to establish the negligence of the defendant. The train that killed the decedent was running very rapidly and this fact had an important -bearing upon the question whether the whistle was sounded at a proper distance from the road crossing, so as to give an approaching vehicle timely notice that a train was coming. The testimony upon this point was not in harmony, • and *265its total effect was Tor the jury. So, also, the testimony concerning’ the ringing- of the electric bell at the crossing was in conflict, and could not be passed upon by the court.
The difficult question is whether the decedent is chargeable with contributory negligence, and upon this point it is not too much to say that, if the plaintiff’s case had not been helped out by the presumption that her husband performed his duty, and stopped, looked, and listened before he attempted to cross the track, the weight of the evidence would have been so much against her that the verdict could only be regarded as perverse. But since such a presumption undoubtedly exists under the Pennsylvania law, and I am therefore bound to take it into account, I find myself unable to assent to 'the proposition, either that the case should have been withdrawn from the jury, or that the defendant is now entitled to judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
The defendant’s motion for judgment on the reserved point is refused, and to this refusal an exception is sealed. The motion for a new trial is also overruled, and it is ordered that judgment for the plaintiff be entered upon the verdict.