Succop v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

Opinion by

Head, J.,

It cannot be urged the plaintiff’s testimony disclosed any flat violation by him of the imperative rule of law which requires a traveler to stop, look and listen before attempting to enter upon a grade crossing over the tracks of a steam railroad. There is evidence, practically undisputed, the plaintiff did stop, look and listen, and still further that the point at which he stopped was the place usually selected by travelers in the discharge of the duty imposed by the rule. Ordinarily then that rule of law would interpose no barrier to the plaintiff’s recovery. But it is urged that on the day of this accident the view of the west-bound track, usually to be had from that point, was in part obstructed by the presence of some freight cars standing on a siding. The real question in the case therefore is, was the act of the plaintiff in stopping at that point a discharge of his legal duty to observe due care under the circumstances? Many cases have held that such question, except perhaps in extremely rare instances, is a mixed one' of law and fact to be resolved by the jury.

*250The plaintiff further testifies that before entering on the east-bound track, which he reached first and where he could see to the curve, he again looked eastward and could see and hear no approaching train west bound. He then started his team with his loaded wagon to go over the crossing. He passed the east-bound track in safety and had started to cross the west-bound track when his attention was directed to a rapidly approaching train. He endeavored to back his team from that track and had so far succeeded that his wagon, himself and one horse had reached a place of safety, but the rapidity with which the train approached without giving, as he declares, any warning by bell or whistle, left him no time to get the other horse to a place of safety and it was killed. The learned judge below, in the opinion refusing a new trial, adverts to the evidence tending to establish these facts and cites some of the many, cases which declare that under such circumstances there is a question of fact to be answered by the jury. There was no error therefore in the refusal of the learned judge below to direct a verdict for .the defendant or 'enter judgment in its favor non obstante veredicto.

In cases of this character the plaintiff has the burden of proving by evidence that the injury complained of resulted from some negligent act or omission on the part of the defendant. There is no burden on him to prove the negative proposition that he himself committed no act of negligence. It is quite sufficient, both on reason and authority, if in discharging his own burden his proof discloses no act of contributing negligence on his own part. The answer of the trial judge to the plaintiff’s third point was entirely correct, and the defendant has no ground of complaint by reason of it. The second assignment is dismissed.

We can discover nothing in the answer to the first point to warrant the conclusion that the trial judge, by the form of his answer, deprived the defendant of *251any benefit that would accrue from the simple affirmance of it by the use of a single word. It is the duty of a trial judge to affirm a specific prayer for instruction that exhibits a correct statement of a legal principle applicable, but it does not follow this duty can be discharged only by the use of the word “affirmed.”

Under the late decisions the portion of the charge which is the subject of the sixth assignment cannot be said to be ah accurate statement of the law. It was pointed out by Mr. Justice Moschzisker in McGonnell v. Pittsburg Railways Co., 234 Pa. 396, that in personal injury cases damages are assessed as of the date of the trial and not of the injury. Compensation for delay therefore is no necessary incident to such recovery. If the circumstances be such that the jury may justly attribute the delay to the defendant, then they are at liberty to award additional damages by way of compensation for that delay; such damages, however, in no case to exceed a sum equivalent to interest at six per cent on the sum awarded because of the injury complained of. Whilst we must agree that the charge was technically erroneous in this respect, it does not follow such error can be corrected only by another trial. In the present case the plaintiff has filed a stipulation in this court agreeing to remit the sum of $42.67, which will effectually relieve the defendant from any possible injury it could have suffered by the instruction of the learned judge complained of.

We accordingly modify the judgment by reducing it to the smn of $667, and as thus modified it is affirmed.