Court Opinion

ID: 8179390
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:25:32.291539+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:27:49.618888
License: Public Domain

Miller, Judge:
For the alleged negligence of the defendant in striking him with one of its engines at or near the crossing at Hudg-ins Street in the City of Logan, .the plaintiff sued for and obtained a verdict and judgment for two thousand dollars.
The record shows that where the railroad crosses Hudgins Street, practically at right angles, it maintains and operates three tracks running east and west, the one on the north side of the right of way being a spur or switch track for the accommodation of commercial houses and factories located along the right of way, the middle track being the main track for west bound trains, and the south track the main line for east bound trains.
The acts of negligence alleged and relied on for recovery are that the defendant allowed freight cars to remain stand*413ing on said side track, on each side of and near to tbe crossing at Hudgins Street, so as to obstruct tbe view of persons crossing at said place, and tbat on tbe day plaintiff was struck and sustained bis injuries, defendant without due and reasonable care and without any signal by ringing of bell or blowing of whistle drove one of its engines westwardly over tbe middle track striking plaintiff as be stepped upon said middle track from tbe north side thereof and from behind said railroad ears on tbe side track, doing him tbe ■injury of which he complains.
Tbe theory and contention of tbe plaintiff is tbat be was struck at tbe street crossing immediately as be stepped upon tbe track from between tbe ends of tbe freight cars standing on tbe side track. Tbe theory and evidence of tbe defendant is tbat at tbe time plaintiff was struck, be was walking west-wardly between tbe side track and tbe main track next to it, a place of safety, tbe distance between tbe two tracks being about eight and one-balf feet; tbat tbe engine which hit him was moving with its load of coal cars at tbe rate of between four and five miles an hour; tbat tbe bell, automatically operated by air, was continually ringing; and tbat after tbe engine bad passed tbe crossing, plaintiff stepped upon tbe track almost immediately in front of tbe engine, so tbat tbe engineman bad not time to stop before striking him and doing him tbe injury. All tbe trainmen, one a brakeman riding on tbe step on the front of tbe engine tbat bit plaintiff, and one or two disinterested witnesses, agree in stating tbat plaintiff was injured at the time and place claimed by defendant and not at tbe street crossing; but in answer to two special interrogatories propounded by defendant tbe jury in addition to their general verdict responded to tbe first tbat plaintiff was on tbe crossing when struck; and to tbe second question, whether after crossing tbe side track on which the box cars were standing and before going on to the middle track he stopped, looked and listened, answered: “We believe be did.”
All tbe defendant’s witnesses concur in stating tbat tbe bell on the engine was kept ringing before plaintiff was struck, and tbat there was no negligence in failing to give *414proper warning of the approaching train; and they show, and it is not denied, that after entering on to the side track plaintiff had a clear and unobstructed view of any object on the middle track for forty to fifty feet, and if he had looked eastward he could have seen the approaching engine that hit him; and plaintiff admits that he in fact did see and hear the engine and passenger train on the southern or east bound track, which apparently was more obscured by the freight cars on the' side track than the train that hit him.
The defense of the railroad company is that it was not guilty of any negligence; but if properly chargeable with negligence, either in the storage of the freight cars oh the side track or in omitting to ring the bell or blow the whistle, that plaintiff himself was guilty of negligence contributing to his injury, in not looking and not seeing the train, which he must have seen after stepping upon the side track and before he stepped on the middle or main track where he was struck and injured, if he had looked and listened as he was bound to do.
As stated, the undisputed evidence is that the two tracks —that is, the side track and the middle track — were from eight to nine feet apart, so that if, according to plaintiff’s contention, he was struck when on the crossing, he had that distance to walk with unobstructed view of the oncoming train before stepping on to the middle track, and could have seen, as it was his duty to see, the train in time to avoid being struck by the engine. On this controlling fact of contributory negligence, his own evidence, we think, is conclusive. He says that he supposed he looked eastward before stepping upon the middle track, but that when he first looked, he was right on the track. This is a clear admission that up to the time he stepped upon the track he had not looked eastward, and if he had done so he must have seen the train coming from that direction. In another place in his testimony he admits that he did not see the train until just before it struck him. His evidence furthermore amounts to an admission that he looked only for the train on the east bound track, which he admits he saw and heard, *415and was wholly unmindful and unobservant of the train right then upon him and which hit him. That he could have seen the train that struck him in time to have avoided the injury is established not only by his own admissions but by the present physical facts and circumstances. There can be no two views about the evidence on this question. This fact being established so clearly, the question whether plaintiff was on the crossing, as found by the jury, becomes unimportant, and the belief of the jury, that before going on the middle track where he was struck he stopped, looked and listened for approaching locomotives and trains, can not affect the question of contributory negligence, for plaintiff’s own admission is.that he supposed he stopped, looked and listened; but the fact that he only saw the passenger train on the southern or east bound track, shows that he in fact did not see what he could and must have seen if he had looked-eastward, namely the train that struck him; and according to his own evidence, the only evidence introduced by him on this question, he did not look until he stepped on the middle track. The belief of the jury was therefore contrary to all the evidence and contrary to the physical facts, and was wholly without evidence to support it.
Such being the only material and substantial evidence relied on to support the verdict and judgment, the court below, in our opinion, erred: first, in refusing to sustain defendant’s motion to strike out plaintiff’s evidence; second, in denying defendant’s instruction number one, directing a verdict in its favor; third, in refusing to give defendant’s instructions numbers three and five, to the effect that if, as he admitted, plaintiff stepped on the middle track a few feet in front of the approaching train, he could not recover, unless it was shown by the evidence that after so negligently going upon the track the engineer and trainmen in charge of the train could have- prevented the collision, for there is no evidence that the engineer could have prevented the accident.
The principle upon which these motions, as well as the motion of defendant to set aside the verdict and grant it a new trial, should have prevailed, is that it is the duty of *416a traveler in approaching a railway crossing to stop, look and listen, and to look not in one way alone but in both directions, and when, as in the ease at bar, there is nothing to obstruct his view or hearing, the question of negligence becomes one of law for the court and not of fact for the jury. Cline v. McAdoo, 85 W. Va. 524; Bassford v. P. P. C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 70 W. Va. 280; Riedel v. Wheeling Traction Co., 63 W. Va. 522.
And the fact most relied on, that there were freight cars standing on the side track, which may have to some extent obscured the view and obstructed the hearing of plaintiff, required of him greater caution and increase of diligence in the exercise of his faculties and senses to avert any injury. He did see the train on the southern track. Why did he not at least see the train that hit him on the track nearest to him? There can be but one answer, namely, that he did not employ his senses as the law required him to do. Beyel v. Newport News and M. V. R. R. Co., 34 W. Va. 538; City of Elkins v. Western Maryland Ry. Co., 76 W. Va. 733. In the latter case we distinguished it from the former and disapproved the so-called “hard and fast” rule once prevailing in Pennsylvania, but we adhered to the principle that where one walking, and not in charge of a team, or surrounded by other peculiar circumstance, steps upon a railroad track where trains are moving, without stopping or at least looking and listening, he is guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law; and when, as in this case, it be clearly proven or admitted that if the person injured had looked he must have seen the approaching train, his protest that he did not see it should be disregarded. His failure to make use of his faculties of sight and hearing under such circumstances is negligence per se, where it appears as here that a reasonable and fair use thereof would have disclosed his danger. Riedel v. Wheeling Traction Co., supra; Bassford v. P. C. C. & St. L. Ry. Co., supra.
These conclusions render it unnecessary,, perhaps improper, for us to consider the question of the preponderance of defendant’s evidence on the question of defendant’s negligence, or on the place where and the circumstances of the *417plaintiff’s injury, for there must be a new trial, when the evidence may possibly be somewhat different.
And for the same reason it is unnecessary to consider the quantum of damages or to express any opinion thereon.
Our judgment will be to reverse the judgment below and award the defendant a new trial.

Reversed and remanded.