Court Opinion

ID: 8771723
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 12:47:01.742156+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:02:15.864092
License: Public Domain

AMIDON, District Judge
(dissenting). In my judgment the foregoing opinion departs widely from the rule established by the Supreme Court defining the duty of travelers at railroad crossings, and imposes upon therp the whole burden of avoiding collision.
The accident occurred at the town of Vinita, in Indian Territory, a city having between 3,500 and 4,000 inhabitants. The railroad passes through the city from east to west. The main business district lies, immediately south of the right of way, and extends, along a street parallel therewith. About one-half of the population resided north of the tracks, and Scraper avenue, upon which the accident occurred, was the principal thoroughfare used by them in passing to and from the business district. The defendant has four tracks over this street. The southermost is an industry track. North of this, 111 feet, is a freight siding. North of that, 55 feet, is the main track, north of which, 16 feet, is a passing track. The accident occurred on the evenr ing of April 2, 1907, between 7:30 and 8 o’clock. The night, according to plaintiff’s testimony, was “a very dark, kinder cloudy, foggy night.” This statement is in no way contradicted, but is confirmed by the testimony of another witness. Cundieff had been to the business district and started to go to his home north of the track. He approached the crossing on the east side of Scraper avenue. At the time a freight train was moving east on the northernmost track, obstructing his passage. When he got near to the second track, he saw three lights on the freight depot platform immediately west of Scraper avenue, and a signal was given by one of these lights which would be a proper direction to a train to move ahead. The freight train answered the signal with two blasts of the whistle, from which the plaintiff understood that it .was about to pull out of the city. When within six or eight *327feet of tlie freight siding, being the second track from the south, he k'oked both east and west to see if any train was approaching, and seeing none he passed over that track. Before going upon the main track he again stopped and looked for trains, and was unable to discover any. He says: “I stopped and looked again on the main line to cross it.” At this time the train that was passing east on the north track was about to clear tlie crossing as he saw by the lantern of a brakeman who was hanging from the side of the car next to the rear. He proceeded over tlie crossing, expecting to reach the north track at the west side of the street by the time the train had cleared it; but as he was passing over the main track he was struck by the rear end of a string of cars that was being backed westward over Uiat track by a locomotive at the other end, and received the injuries for which this action is brought. The track inclined slightly to the west, and the train was moving five or six miles an hour. There was no light at any place on this string of cars, nor any trainmen to warn the public of its approach. One witness speaks of seeing a caboose in the train of which these cars were a part, at the time it pulled into the city; but every other witness testified positively that there was no caboose in this string of cars, nor any lights displayed upon it. The crossing was not lighted. No bell was rung or whistle sounded.
Upon these facts the court holds that Cundieff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in failing to discover the_ cars by which he was injured. This conclusion is reached from the evidence of four witnesses testifying that they were able to see one or both of the trains in question at distances ranging from 30 to 71 feet. From this as a basis the conclusion is held to be inevitable that if Cundieff had looked he must have seen the car that struck him in time to have avoided the collision. In my judgment this conclusion is not warranted, because the observations were made under widely different circumstances.
The plaintiff testified that before he crossed the house track, which was 71. feet south of the passing track, he could see the train on that track going east. “If this be true,” the court says, “it is difficult to understand why he could not see the train on the main line, as there was nothing between him and that train to obstruct his view, and the main line was nearer to him than the passing track.” At the time he saw this train on the passing track, however, the train on the main track must have been east of the crossing and wholly outside his range of vision. He was not asked to state how long he stood at the house track, or between that and the main track, waiting for the train that was moving east to clear the crossing; but a fair inference from the evidence is that considerable time must have elapsed. There is nothing in the record that would justify a belief that he looked past the train that injured him when he saw the train on the north track. I assume, however, that the language of the court quoted means that, if Cundieff could see the train on the passing track at a distance of 71 feet, it would have been possible for him to see the train on the main track in time to avoid the collision. It seems to me. however, that this overlooks two controlling facts: First, the train on the passing track pre*328sented itself to Cundieff broadside. It was moving as he was thus looking in the direction of it, and might very well have been disclosed to his view first by the different cars passing between him and lights north of« the track. Common experience would show that a train under such circumstances would be visible when a train that was approaching the observer showing nothing but a dark end would not be discovered. Second, Cundieff’s attention might have been first directed to the train on the north track by the sound which it produced, and his attention thus have been focused upon it. It is an elementary law of optics, as well as a matter of common knowledge, that it is possible to see an object of whose presence we have been made aware by its sound, when it would not have been seen if the attention had not thus been drawn to it by the certainty of its presence. There was no opportunity, however, for Cundieff thus to discover the train that was moving on the main track at the time of the injury. The long train that was passing east on the north track was, he says, making considerable noise. His ears were first filled with its roar. Any other similar sound coming within the range of his hearing would have been naturally attributed to that train as its cause.
' It is next urged that because Cundieff discovered the brakeman on the side of the train on the north track, and stated that he was on the second car from the rear, it must have been light enough, according to his own testimony, to enable him to count the cars between the brakeman and the caboose. “If the light was sufficient to enable him to -do that,” the opinion says, “it seems to us it was sufficient to enable him to see the train on the main .line, which was nearer him.” It is easy for me to understand that Cundieff might have discovered the length of the train by its sound, and thus' estimated the number of cars in it, or that he might have discovered the rear of the train by the appearance of lights in the northern part of town, as the train moved eastward, and,ceased to obstruct his vision. If the rear car of this train was a caboose (about which the evidence is in conflict), of course, that would clearly indicate to an observer the number of cars between 'the brakeman'with his lantern on the side of' the train and the caboose. This is all of the testimony of Cundieff from which the inference is drawn that he ought to have discovered the train on the main track, and it seems to me wholly insufficient to justify the inference as a matter of law.
A witness by the name of Weed testified that he saw the train that injured Cundieff from a point south of the main line on Scraper avenue ; but he states that he first discovered it by the light of the train on the north track. His testimony on that subject is as follows:
“Q. Had you seen the train that was supposed, to have run over him?
“A. I did not only by the light of the other train.”
In another part of his evidence this witness testified that he also heard the train. His testimony is badly confused as to where he stood at the time he made these observations; but he gave as his final judgment that he was' not more than 30 feet south of the main track. Three features of his evidence impress me: First, he was made aware of the train causing the injury by the lights north of it; second, he *329was a sufficient distance from both trains so he could easily have distinguished the sound of the one from the other; and, third, he looked at the train from the side and not from the end. That he was able to see this string of cars under such circumstances is therefore to me very slight proof that Cundieff ought to have seen them under his essentially different conditions.
There were two other witnesses by the name of Pershing and Deaii. At about the time of the accident they were traveling east on the right of way north of the north track. They crossed over between this track and the main track about 150 feet west of Scraper avenue. They then saw the string of cars that had struck Cundieff. At that time it was passing on a spur leading off to the southwest immediately west of Scraper avenue. They testified that they were able to see these cars at a distance of from 30 to 35 feet, and from this the court draws die inference that Cundieff could have seen them for a like distance, and was negligent in failing to do so. In my judgment these witnesses occupied an entirely different position from that which he occupied: First, there was nothing to distract their attention from the sound of these cars, and they may have first discovered them by tlieir noise, and then directed their gaze to ascertain its cause. Second, the plat that was introduced in evidence shows that these cars passed between these witnesses and the three lanterns of the trainmen that were standing on the platform of the freight depot, and they might have discovered the presence of the cars by their cutting off these lights. Third, the cars passed between them and the main business part of the city, and for this reason they could easily have discovered the cars by their intercepting the lights in that part of the town. Finally, the cars were presented to them nearly broadside. They therefore occupied an entirely different relation to the cars from that which Cundieff occupied. It must also be borne in mind that their estimate as to the distance was made in the night, and was for this reason subject to serious error. It further appears that these witnesses estimated the number of cars as eight; but this may have been simply an opinion based upon the distance between the rear of the cars and the light of the locomotive which they say they saw as it passed over Cundieff, and disclosed him lying oil the ground, or they might have discovered the number of cars as they passed to Cundieff, going along opposite the train. So their statement that there were about eight cars in the string is no proof of what could be seen by Cundieff.
It is next urged that the string of cars which struck Cundieff must have made considerable noise, which he should have heard; but, as already stated, it would have been perfectly easy for Cundieff to confound any noise made by these cars with the noise of the train that was passing on the track immediately north. It is said that it only took two or three steps to cross the track; but all the authorities agree that the law does not fix any specific point from which the traveler must look. Elliott on Railroads, § 1166(a); Cleveland, etc., R. R. Co. v. Miles, 162 Ind. 646, 70 N. E. 985. Cundieff says that after he crossed the house track, and before he entered upon the main track, he looked for trains upon that track. Just how many feet he was *330away, or how rapidly he moved, is wholly a matter of conjecture. He says he thought he would have to swerve a little to the west in order to get around the rear of the train that was passing on the north track. He was waiting for the crossing to be cleared, and his movements may have been slow in view of that fact. Such evidence is clearly for the consideration of the jury. Zwack v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 160 N. Y. 362, 366, 54 N. E. 785. Certainly it is departing, in my judgment, widely from any previous decision, for the court to hold as a matter of law that Cundieff was negligent in not hearing the train that was moving towards him very slowly without any sound of bell or whistle, while another train was passing within a few feet.
It seems to me that all the facts upon which the court finds the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law are simply features proper for the consideration of the jury in determining the issue. The rule which declares that when the “physical facts” show that the traveler must have discovered the train if he had looked and listened, his negligence becomes a matter of law, can properly be applied only when the physical facts are .themselves unambiguous. Even in Pennsylvania, where the duty of the traveler is more burdensome than in any other state, contributory negligence will not be declared as a matter of law unless the evidence clearly shows that the plaintiff must have discovered the train if he had looked and listened. Davidson v. L. S. & M. S. Ry., 171 Pa. 522, 33 Atl. 86; Kuntz v. N. Y., C. & St. L. R. R. Co., 206 Pa. 162, 55 Atl. 915. The doctrine has never been enforced, so far as I can learn, except in cases where the train approached a crossing in the open day, with an unobstructed track, or in the nighttime when it exhibited a headlight or some other conspicuous illumination, or when a single train was within hearing, and causing sufficient noise to make it physically impossible that the traveler would not have heard it if he had listened. After a careful examination of the authorities, I feel confident in the assertion that the rule mentioned has never before been applied to a dark freight train moving over a public thoroughfare without any warning bell, whistle, or light, while another train was passing. Plere it is not “physical facts,” like a headlight at night, or a train on an open track in the daytime that form the ground of the court’s decision, but evidence touching how far cars could be seen under circumstances widely different from those which surrounded the plaintiff. In the Houston Case, 95 U. S. 697, 24 L. Ed. 542, where the rule was first stated, the deceased had a clear view of the train for three-fourths of a mile. The headlight of the engine was burning. It was also bright moonlight, and the train, which was moving rapidly, created a loud noise. Eater cases following this decision have all exhibited trains whose approach to the crossing was manifest with equal clearness. In the present case the night was very dark and foggy. The crossing was obstructed by a long freight train that was moving over it. As the passage clears, the plaintiff goes forward, after looking and listening for danger, when a string of freight cars is backed down upon him on a parallel track. The grade is slightly favorable, so that in all probability no noise is made by the exhaust of the locomotive. The sound of the cars is con*331cealed by the roar of the train that is passing on the adjoining track. No light whatever is exhibited, nor is any bell rung’or whistle sounded. I ask with all candor what circumstance is here wanting which ought to be present in order to make a case proper for the consideration of a jury? There is no absolute rule of law that the traveler’s failure to see a train is negligence. Whether it is such must depend upon the circumstances. Is it the purpose of this court to establish as a rule of law that a pedestrian cannot in any case recover for injuries suffered at a railway crossing? That his failure to discover a train, however negligent its management, establishes contributory negligence as a matter of law? In every one of the hundreds of cases in which a recovery has been sustained, it was physically possible for the traveler to have discovered the train. Whether his failure to make the discovery showed a want of such care as reasonably prudent men are accustomed to exercise in going upon crossings was held to be a question for the juryg but the majority in the present case seem to me to apply the rigid rule that, if it can be said upon a calm consideration of the evidence that it. was physically possible for 1he plaintiff to discover the train, his failure to do so establishes his legal negligence. The enforcement of such a rule devolves upon the traveler the whole burden of avoiding collisions at crossings. That, in my judgment, is not the law. The duty is mutual. Railroad companies are hound to warn the public by some signal of tbe approach of their trains. I, of course, am well aware that the omission to appeal to the ear of the traveler by the ringing of the bell and the sounding of the whistle will not excuse him from the use of his eyes ; and if the situation is such that by looking, as a prudent man would have looked under all the circumstances, he might have discovered the train, his failure to do so establishes his negligence. That, however, is not the present case. Here the railroad company not only omitted the signals which appeal to the ear, but also all signals which appeal to the eye. The train approached the crossing without any outward indication of its presence. Railroads, by-years of customary practice, have taught the public to believe that a train approaching a crossing in the nighttime will exhibit a light or sound a bell, or both. Can it be held to be negligence on the part of the public that it relies upon this invariable custom? When there is no light and no signal, is it the duty of the public to assume that the company is likely to be guilty of an act of criminal negligence, and to institute a search in the dark to find a train? That would require, not ordinary, but most extraordinary, care. In not one time in a million will a train he pushed over a public crossing in 1lie nighttime without one or both of the usual warnings. It has been repeatedly declared by the courts that to do so is an act of gross and criminal negligence. If the present accident had resulted in death, instead of injury, the trainmen, under the laws of Oklahoma, as well as under the laws of a majority of the states of the Union, would have been guilty of manslaughter for doing an act so imminently dangerous and so utterly regardless of human life. Can railroads by an invariable practice drill the public as to what may be expected in the movements of trains at railway crossings, and then when they depart from that practice say that the traveler is guil*332ty of negligence because he relied upon the practice? The'senses discover what experience has taught them to expect. If an object is accustomed to exhibit certain conspicuous features, the eye, when looking for the object, looks for those features only, and, if they are not shown, the mind by an involuntary judgment calls back the eye from further search. Any other process would make the ordinary movements of life impossible. We should have to pause at every step to conduct a multitude of original investigations instead of being guided by the quick, involuntary judgments that are the results of common experience. When Cundieff looked up the track and saw no light and heard no bell or whistle, he had a right to believe that no train was approaching, and to act accordingly. He was not called upon to turn a searching gaze into the night to see if he could not descry a dark train creeping down upon him. Prudent men do not do that. If the law requires them to, it requires what is unusual, unnatural, and unjust. It overlooks the mutual and reciprocal duties of the railroad company and the traveler. It exonerates the former from the consequences 'of its criminal negligence, and requires the public to use extraordinary car$ to avoid the unusual and unexpected dangers arising from such negligence.
In the federal courts there are two well-defined classes of cases on the subject of accidents at crossings. In the one the train approaches the crossing in the open day with a clear track, or in the nighttime exhibiting a headlight or some other equally conspicuous illumination. This class of cases starts with Houston v. Railroad Company, 95 U. S. 697, 24 L. Ed. 542, which has already been fully described. To it belongs Schofield v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co., 114 U. S. 615, 5 Sup. Ct. 1125, 29 L. Ed. 224 (daytime, with a clear view of the train for 70 rods, with nothing to distract the attention); Elliott v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co., 150 U. S. 245, 14 Sup. Ct. 85, 37 L. Ed. 1068 (open day with clear view of the train, and plaintiff, a section boss, walked in front of the cars, and evidence affirmatively showed that he neither looked nor listened); Northern Pacific v. Freeman, 174 U. S. 379, 19 Sup. Ct. 763, 43 L. Ed. 1014 (open day, a clear view of the track for 300 feet, and affirmative evidence that plaintiff did not look, but drove upon the track with his head down). In all of these cases plaintiff sought to recover because the train failed to ring the bell or sound’ the whistle. The court held that, if he had used his eyes, he must have seen the train, and that he was guilty of contributory negligence in not looking. To this class all the cases cited in the prevailing opinion will be found upon examination to clearly belong.
The second class involves situations in which, the physical facts being shown, it was uncertain whether the plaintiff was negligent in failing to discover the train. Most of them, like the present case, involved the passing of a string of cars over railway crossings m the nighttime without light or sound. This class of cases also had its beginning in the same volume as the Houston Case, and is first illustrated by Continental Improvement Co. v. Stead, 95 U. S. 161, 24 L. Ed. 403. There a string of cars were thrown over a suburban crossing by a flying switch without any warning of their approach, and the case was *333held to be one for the jury. The court states forcibly the duty of railroads to notify the public by some warning of the approach of their trains to crossings, and that, if no warning is given which appeals clearly either to the eye or ear, the traveler cannot be held guilty of contributory negligence in failing to discover the train. This case, like the Houston Case, was a unanimous opinion of the court. Its doctrines have been applied in the following cases: D. L. & W. L. Co. v. Converse, 139 U. S. 469, 11 Sup. Ct. 569, 35 L. Ed. 213 (a flying switch in the nighttime); Grand Trunk v. Ives, 114 U. S. 408, 12 Sup. Ct. 679, 36 L. Ed. 485 (an obstructed crossing); Texas & Pac. Ry. Co. v. Cody, 166 U. S. 606, 17 Sup. Ct. 703, 41 L. Ed. 1132 (a traveler on foot, and dark freight train backed over a crossing in the nighttime); Baltimore & Potomac R. R. Co. v. Cumberland, 176 U. S. 232, 20 Sup. Ct. 380, 44 L. Ed. 447 (a reversed locomotive without headlight, but showing a lantern — a much stronger case for the defendant than the present).
There are two other cases in the Supreme Court whose facts are so nearly similar to the facts of the case here under review that I think they should be more fully discussed. Texas & Pac. Ry. Co. v. Gentry, 163 U. S. 353, 16 Sup. Ct. 104, 41 L. Ed. 186. Gentry was an engineer residing at Big Springs, Tex., a division point. He started to go to his engine in the yards between 8:30 and 9 o’clock on the evening of March 13th. Pie traveled by a path leading under the staging of a coal chute. The distance between the coal chute and the track upon which he was killed was 13 feet. While traveling over this space, he had a clear view of the track. A road engine with a flat car attached in front of it was being temporarily used in the yards for switching purposes. Its headlight was burning brightly, and illumined the half of the car farthest from the engine. Gentry stepped in front of the car and was killed. The main defense was contributory negligence. The statement of facts in the" decision of the Supreme Court is not clear. Owing to what was said in C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co. v. Clarkson, 147 Fed. 397, 77 C. C. A. 575, as to the evidence upon which the Gentry Case was decided, I have obtained a copy of the original record from the clerk of the Supreme Court, and examined the testimony for the purpose of ascertaining precisely the facts that were there before the court From this it appears that the plaintiff in support of her case introduced the testimony of 15 railroadmen. Two of these stated that the flat car could not be seen. One did not testify at all upon that subject. Ten stated either that it would be-"difficult to see such a car under the circumstances,” or “a person standing in front of the engine opposite the track could not easily see the flat car.” Three witnesses (one of whom was a brother of deceased), on the evening of the accident, made a test with the same engine and the same car at the point where Gentry was killed, to ascertain whether the car would be visible. One of these witnesses stated the result of that experiment as follows:
“We passed under die coal clmte as we supposed L. G. Gentry did, and had the engine go down the main line. I could see the flat car. 1 cannot say whether I would have seen it or not had I not known it wa«s there, and had I not been looking for it.”
*334The brother of the deceased stated:
“I do not think that an unsuspecting person would have seen the car as the headlight shone over it and blinded the eyes. I did see the car, because I knew it was there, and was looking for it.”
The third witness, a brother engineer, testified as follows:
“If a person was standing in front of said engine, the flat ear could be seen with difficulty. I was standing by the side of the car when the engine and.car passed me about 5 or 6 feet from me. Of course, I knew the ear was there, and it was very little difficulty for me to see it;, but a person not knowing it was there might not have seen it easily. If a man knew the car was there, he could very easily see it by the headlight. Standing by the side of the track the headlight of the engine would have no effect upon the vision of the person, I don’t think; but standing in the middle of the track, and looking at such headlight, it might have had a dazzling effect upon the vision. About half of the car was illuminated by such reflected light from the headlight. The end of the car was much more illuminated than back towards the middle of the car and towards the engine. The end of the car farthest from the engine was in a brighter light and clearly visible.”
With a single exception plaintiff’s witnesses all agreed that the headlight would illuminate about one-half of the car.
The remarkable feature of the decision is this; The defendant requested the following instruction, which was refused:
“You are instructed that it is the duty of an employe or any other party about to cross a railroad track to look and listen for passing engines, cars, or ’ trains, to ascertain whether or not same are approaching before going upon the track, and if a party fails to exercise such care he cannot recover. You are therefore instructed that if the deceased, L. G. Gentry, by looking or listening, could have known of the approach of the engine and car, in time to have kept off the track and prevented the injury to himself, and if he failed to do so, you will find for the defendant.”
There was nothing in the charge as given which embodied the substance of this request; but the court held that its refusal was not error. The Houston Case in 95 U. S. 697, 24 L. Ed. 542, and other decisions of the Supreme Court declaring the duty to look and listen before going upon the track, were urged upon the attention of the court, and in distinguishing the instant case from those cases the court said:
“But the present case did not admit of or require an instruction upon this special subject. There was no evidence upon which to rest such an instruction. As already stated, no one personally witnessed the crossing of the track by the deceased, nor the running of the flat car over it. Whether he did or did not stop and look and listen for approaching trains the jury could not tell from the evidence. The presumption is that he did, and, if the court had given the special instruction asked,, it would have been necessary to accompany it with the statement that there was no evidence upon the point, and that the la.w presumed that the deceased did look and listen for coming trains before crossing the track.”
It may be doubted whether all this language can now be regarded as consistent with later decisions of the Supreme Court. It would seem as if the physical facts, in combination with the evidence above referred to, made such a showing as to render the requested instruction proper. What the opinion of the Supreme Court in this case, however, does teach with unmista.kable emphasis, is that “physical facts,” in order to establish contributory negligence as a matter of law, must *335be unambiguous. The facts themselves, without argument, must show that, if the traveler had used his faculties of hearing and seeing, he must have discovered the train. The plaintiff’s evidence in the Gentry-Case established beyond any reasonable doubt that, if Gentry had looked for the car, lie could have seen it. His own brother, as the result of the test made on the same evening as the accident, bore testimony to that effect; but the court held that the car was not dearly visible, and therefore that the rule declared in the Houston Case could not be applied. In the present case the dark end of the train that injured the plaintiff was certainly as obscure as the car that killed Gentry. Here, too, the court is not left to the feeble presumption that the plaintiff exercised care. lie appeared as a witness, and testified positively that he looked and listened for the train, and was unable to discover its presence. The car that struck the plaintiff was obscured by reason of the very dark night. The car that struck Gentry was obscured because of the radiance of the headlight. In the Gentry Case the Supreme Court held that it was not even proper to call the jury’s attention to the rule requiring the traveler to look and listen. Here the jury, upon a charge to which the defendant took no exception, have found in plaintiff’s favor. Surely we cannot reverse their finding without rendering a decision that is clearly in conflict with the opinion of the Supreme. Court in the Gentry Case.
The latest decision of the Supreme Court (Baltimore & Potomac R. R. Co. v. Landrigan, 191 U. S. 461, 24 Sup. Ct. 137, 48 L. Ed. 262) is directly in point on its facts. The defendant’s four tracks were laid in Virginia avenue, in the city of Washington, and were crossed by South Capital street. The crossing was well lighted by four gas lamps at each of its corners, and further by two electric lights which were sufficiently near to throw considerable light upon the place. The flagman’s box at the crossing obstructed the view to one standing outside the gates ; but inside the gates the view along the track was clear. The accident occurred about midnight. At the time a limited passenger train was running out of the city over the crossing. The deceased was killed by a “runaway” Pullman car which was being switched in the yard, and had broken loose by reason of a defect in the coupling. The tracks were slightly inclined, and this car moved slowly down toward the crossing about as fast as a man could walk, in the direction opposite to that of the passenger train, and reached the crossing at the same time as the locomotive of that train. It was a vestibuled car, and the end towards the crossing had a brilliant lamp in the vestibule which clearly illuminated the end of the car and the track for some distance in front of it. The evidence shows that Landrigan was struck at the east side of Capital street, and the car approached from the west, so it was at least clearly visible while it was passing over the entire street, and to one standing inside of the gates it was visible for a much greater distance. Landrigan had been employed for eight years as an assistant boss in the defendant’s roundhouse. His home was north of the railroad tracks, and he had been accustomed to pass over the crossing daily during the period of his employment. He stepped upon the track on the night in question in front of the Pullman car, and was struck by it *336and killed. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict upon the ground of his contributory negligence, which was denied, and the case submitted to the jury, who returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. There is not a circumstance in the present case justifying a reversal of the judgment which was not present in that case, and there are several circumstances tending to show that the plaintiff there was negligent, which are not here present: First, the crossing was well lighted so as to leave no room for doubt that the car could have been seen if the traveler had looked in its direction. Second, the brilliant light in the vestibule of the sleeper is another strong circumstance showing that the car was plainly visible as it approached the point of the accident. Third, the only evidence tending to show that Randrigan looked and listened before going upon the track was the presumption of care. In the present case there is the same presumption coupled with the positive evidence of the plaintiff that he did look and listen. Randrigan’s attention, the same as plaintiff’s here, was distracted by another train upon a parallel track. If that case was properly affirmed, surely the present should be.
I shall not further prolong the opinion to examine cases in detail, but shall simply cite others of a similar nature in which judgments for the plaintiff have been sustained upon evidence less cogent than is shown by the present record: Texas & Pac. Ry. Co. v. Cody, 166 U. S. 606, 17 Sup. Ct. 703, 41 L. Ed. 1132; B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Griffith, 159 U. S. 603, 16 Sup. Ct. 105, 40 L. Ed. 274; D., L. & W. R. R. Co. v. Converse, 139 U. S. 469, 11 Sup. Ct. 569, 35 L. Ed. 213; Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Ives, 144 U. S. 408, 12 Sup. Ct. 679, 36 L. Ed. 485; C., R. I. & Pac. R. R. Co. v. Sharp, 63 Fed. 532, 11 C. C. A. 337; McGhee v. White, 66 Fed. 502, 13 C. C. A. 608; C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co. v. Donovan, 160 Fed. 826, 87 C. C. A. 600; Henavie v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. Co., 166 N. Y. 281, 59 N. E. 901; Judson v. Central Vt. R. R. Co., 158 N. Y. 597, 53 N. E. 514; Zwack v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 160 N. Y. 362, 54 N. E. 785; Smedis v. B. & R. B. R. R. Co., 88 N. Y. 13; French v. Railroad Co., 116 Mass. 537; Canning v. B., R. & P. Ry. Co., 168 N. Y. 555, 61 N. E. 901.
The Houston Case was decided in 1877. For more than 30 years the courts have rigorously enforced the rule requiring the traveler to look and listen. -During that period the roll of death and accident at crossings has steadily increased from year to year. I have no disposition to abate the rule in any degree, when the facts to which it is properly applicable are present; but in my judgment the duty rests upon railroads to apprise the traveler in some way clearly of the approach of trains, and sound public policy forbids their exemption from liability when they fail to do so.