[After stating the facts as above.] — If the plaintiff’s theory was credited by the jury, he was plainly entitled to a verdict. If the defendants’ theory was credited, it was equally plain that the plaintiff must fail. It was a case for the determination of the jury, and the motion for a nonsuit was properly denied.
Hpon submitting the case to the jury, the judge charged at length upon the law of the case, and in some respects more favorably to the defendants than the law would authorize. As
3. The judge was requested to charge that “ the fact, conceded
3. The judge was requested to charge that “the fact of the plaintiff having fallen on the track, does not affect the question of the defendants’ negligence, unless accompanied with evidence of the driver’s having actually seen him on the track, in time to have stopped the car before reaching him.” This proposition cannot be maintained. If a child falls upon a track and is unable immediately to arise therefrom, and being then upon the track, is run over by the defendants’ car, having ample time for its stoppage, and the driver, engaged in conversation with the passengers, with his back towards the horses, by reason of this occupation does not actually see the child be- ' fore he is run over, is this negligence on the part of the company ? 1 can imagine none more palpable and gross.
4. The judge was requested to charge, that the “jury must be satisfied not only that the boy fell on the track and the • driver’s face was ’ averted so that he could not see him as he lay, but that if he had seen him the car could have been stopped by the driver in the exercise of ordinary care, in time to prevent the collision.” The charge was made, omitting the words “ with ordinary care.”
Ordinary care is not sufficient under such circumstances. If a human being is seen by an engineer or by a driver lying upon a railroad track, it is his duty to exercise the very highest care, and to make the greatest effort to avoid his destruction.
That ordinary care and reasonable diligence which would suffice to protect a bale of goods, is far below the standard of duty required on such an occasion. This doctrine is laid down in all the cases as to locomotive trains, and the principle is the same as to horse cars. The care and attention must be in proportion to the damages or injury. The very best means of protection must be furnished by the company to their agents, and the agents must use them in the most skillful and careful manner.
It'is somewhat singular that neither party provedjwithin
Judgment should he affirmed.
[After stating the nature of the action.] — The principal questions arise on the motions made to dismiss the complaint when the plaintiff rested his case, and again when all the testimony was given. Both of these motions were denied, and I think properly.
Assuming, as the plaintiff’s own testimony justifies us in doing, that he did not look up and down the street to see if a car was coming, that fact alone did not, under the proof, properly charge him with negligence. The testimony given, before the plaintiff rested, in its most favorable aspect to the defendants, showed that the car, when the plaintiff fell, was “ about fifteen steps (of twenty-eight inches each) from him.” That is thirty-five feet. It cannot be claimed, as a conclusion of law, that he could not have crossed the track before that distance was traversed in the usual rate of traveling, or that there was negligence in endeavoring to do so. It seems idle to say that the mere omission to look up or down the track is negligence, if it is shown that, at the time, a car on the horse railroad was three or four blocks-distant, or, in other words, when it was in fact so far off that such looking could not have prevented the crossing, or, in the ordinary course of using the road, would not have imposed the duty of stopping till the car was passed.
The case was not altered in its legal aspect, so far as the motion for a nonsuit was concerned, by the defendant’s evidence. It presented a conflict between the statement of the witnesses, and of such a serious difference, that the court could not assume that the defendants’ evidence was correct and absolutely controlling.
The judge charged the jury that if that evidence was correct, the plaintiff could not recover. That direction was as favorable to the defendants as they can claim. In no view of the testimony would a nonsuit have been proper. The charge was very fair and liberal, indeed, to the company, and no exception was taken thereto. The propositions asked to be charged and
Upon the whole, after a careful examination of the evidence and a full consideration of the appellants’ points and argument, I concur in the opinion of the judge at the general term of the supreme court.
Judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All the judges present concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
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Compare Honegsberger v. Second-ave. R. R. Co., vol. 2, p. 378, of this series, and cases cited.