On the 5th of PTovember, 1889, the plaintiff, with a companion named John Hughes, left East Buffalo about seven o’clock in the evening to come to their homes in the city, in a one horse carriage. The sides of the carriage were closed with curtains, which to some extent obstructed their view in those directions. Their route lay along Eagle street, which is crossed by the tracks of the defendant’s railroad and by those of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern railroad, the defendant having two and the Lake Shore three tracks across the street at that point. The tracks of the defendant are west ■ of those of the Lake Shore. These five sets of tracks and the distance between them, covered a space of about seventy feet on Eagle street, and they cross the street practically at right angles. The view to the north, along the tracks for a long distance from a point about 150 feet east of them was unobstructed, except as to an electric light near the
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove that the train in question, at the time of the accident, was being run at a rajfid rate of speed, at least tAventy-five miles an hour, according to the estimate of one of the. Avitnesses. Evidence was also given tending to prove that no warning of any kind was given of the approach of the train; that the crossing was in a populous part of the city and that that part of Eagle street is much traveled. The defendant was bound to exercise such reasonable precaution in the running of its trains as ordinary prudence dictated to protect travellers along the street from injury, and the question whether it in fact exercised due care on this occasion was properly left to the jury. Negligence on the part of the defendant is conclusively established by the verdict. Thompson v. New York, etc., R. Co., 110 N. Y. 636; Swift v. Staten Island, etc., R. Co., 123 id. 645. If it be true, as claimed by the plaintiff, that as he approached the first tracks he did exercise due care to ascertain whether or not it was safe to cross, and having satisfied himself that it was, he Avas in duty bound to do just what he claims to have done, that is to hasten across to a place of safety.
The trial judge instructed the jury that the defendant was not charged by laAV with the duty of having a flagman or person to give warning of approaching trains at this crossing, and that the absence of such a person was a circumstance which
As to the exception to the charge it may be said that although the defendant was bound by law neither to ring its bell, blow its whistle, or keep a flagman at this crossing, yet it was bound to give some notice and warning of the approach of this train and what notice or warning was sufficient was a question for the jury. Proof of the facts as to what precautions were taken was necessary to enable the jury to determine the question. The fact that no flagman or other person to give warning was kept at this crossing was proven by defendant itself and, therefore, it cannot complain of its consideration by the jury.
As to the request to charge, the sense of it i« that because the. plaintiff knew no flagman was regularly stationed at this crossing his conduct would not have been affected or influenced by the presence of one on this occasion, if one had been present.
The effect which the presence of a flagman might have had upon the conduct of the plaintiff if proper for consideration at all, was for the jury and not for the court.
The charge of the court as to the right of the jury to consider the speed of the train; as to the degree of care incumbent upon the defendant in its management, and as to whether or not the train was late on this occasion, is criticised and excepted to by the defendant’s counsel, but we are unable to discover any substantial error in the charge in any of these respects.
The speed, of the train and whether any warning of its approach was given, were questions not only proper but necessary to be answered by the jury in determining whether or not the defendant was guilty of negligence.
The counsel for the defendant excepted to the refusal of the court to charge specifically: “that if the jury believe that they” (Moore and Hughes) “did not look from the time they struck the Lake Shore track until they got struck, although they had an opportunity of looking, and seeing the train if they had looked, then they must find that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence.”
Upon this subject the court had already charged the jury very fully to the effect that the law imposed upon the plaintiff the duty of listening, and looking both ways as he approached this crossing and that if he could by the exercise of those precautions have discovered the approach of this train in time to have avoided the injury he could not recover, and its refusal to repeat the charge was proper. Raymond v. Richmond, 88 N. Y. 671.
An exception was also taken by the defendants to the refusal of the court to charge that the evidence in the case is undisputed that the horse ran into the train and caused the injury complained of. It is hardly worth while to discuss this question at length, because it is impossible that, as the evidence tended to show, after the accident, one of the wheels of the buggy could have been found on the front of the engine, and the buggy have been all smashed to pieces and the horse have had one leg cut off, and that the remains of the buggy could have been found west of the track on which the accident occurred, as the result of an attempt by the plaintiffs horse to get through or' over the train while it was running at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour. We think the jury was alone competent to decide the precise or probable cause of the accident, and that their finding upon that question must stand.
The serious contention on the part of the defendant is that
When it is remembered that the evening of this accident may have been quite dark ; that the view to the north may have been somewhat obstructed by the electric light near the crossing, and its effect upon surrounding objects; that the train which caused the injury may have been drawing to the point of collision at the rate of forty feet or more in each second of time, and that the mind of the plaintiff may not have operated with that rapidity which seems to have been sometimes assumed as necessary in such cases, we cannot, as matter of law, attribute negligence to the plaintiff. While diligence to discover danger in such case may reasonably be required, no absolute, iron-ribbed standard of intelligence or foresight has yet been adopted by the courts as applicable to all men, under all circumstances. We do not deem the Wervnowski case an authority against the plaintiff. The facts in that case Avere noticeably different from those in this one. Among other things, it appeared in that case, that there was absolutely no obstruction to the vision. In this case, the electric light and its effect upon surrounding objects may have obstructed the view to the north to some extent. In that case.
Titus, Oh. J., concurs. Hatch, J., not sitting-.