Orlowski v. Pere Marquette Railway Co.

Wiest, C. J.

The 4th day of June, 1920, in mid-afternoon, while plaintiff was driving his automobile across the railroad track of defendant at a street crossing about 100 feet north of the passenger depot in the village of Ellsworth, the engine stalled and the automobile stopped on the railroad track. Plaintiff’s automobile had been parked near the depot and he had just started from there under low speed to make the crossing, and before driving on the track had looked and no train was in sight. When his car stopped on the track he again looked and saw a passenger train coming from the south around a bend over 1,200 feet away. He then glanced to see if the switch was on and found it was and stepped on the self-starter; the engine turned over but would not start the car. The whistle of the train caused him to look in that direction and he saw the train nearing the south end of the depot and coming toward him at *582a high rate of speed, and he started to get out of his car but it was too late, and the locomotive struck and pushed his car about 150 feet before the train was stopped. In the accident he received serious injuries and he brought this suit to recover damages, claiming that defendant’s servants in charge of the passenger train were guilty of negligence and he was exercising due care.

The passenger train was one scheduled to stop at Ellsworth and it appears that at such stop the engine always rested across or beyond the street where plaintiff’s car was stalled. At the close of plaintiff’s proofs defendant requested the court to hold plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence, as a matter of law, in remaining in and trying to start his car after he saw the oncoming train and had opportunity to escape. Defendant relies upon the rule applied in Krouse v. Railway Co., 215 Mich. 139, and Apps v. Walters, 216 Mich. 17. In considering this point we must assume the negligence of defendant arid view plaintiff’s acts in as favorable a light as the evidence warrants.

On the part of plaintiff it is claimed he acted as an ordinarily prudent man under the same circumstances would have acted; that he knew the passenger train made the stop, at Ellsworth and his position was such that the train would come to the depot before reaching him; that three small children were in the automobile and it was an act of common prudence on his part to attempt to start the car with the appliance which had worked a few moments before and had never caused him trouble.

If we hold with defendant we establish the rule that, when an automobile stalls upon a railroad track, with a passenger, train over 1,200 feet away, scheduled to stop at an intervening depot, with the locomotive at rest at or slightly beyond the point occupied by the stalled automobile, one in charge of the automobile is *583guilty of contributory negligence if he does not scuttle, instead of making some endeavor to operate his car out of the place of danger. If it was within the range of a finding by the jury that a reasonably prudent man, under like circumstances, would endeavor to start the car, then it is not a question of law. Assuming that plaintiff upon his first view of the oncoming train had time in which to jump from his automobile and to a place of safety, was he, as a matter of law, negligent in not doing so?

There is no evidence that plaintiff was guilty of any negligence in getting his automobile on the track. This, however, is of little importance. There was evidence from which the jury could find that plaintiff had a right to assume this train would make its scheduled stop at the depot and in order to do so would slacken its speed. If the speed of the train had been such as to permit its usual stop would plaintiff have had time to leave his automobile when he made the attempt and get to a place of safety? This presented a question of fact for the jury. In the Krouse Case this question was not involved. Plaintiff’s automobile was stalled at about the point the locomotive would come to rest for the depot stop, and everybody knows that in stopping a train the speed is first reduced. But, it is said, plaintiff had no right to assume it was the afternoon passenger train, for it, so far as he knew at the time, might have been a special train. He appeared, however, to have assumed correctly, and he had good ground for so assuming, and we must consider the case as presented. This locomotive went about 150 feet beyond its usual stopping point. We are not informed of the reason for this except by testimony that it came upon plaintiff at a rapid rate of speed. The defendant company offered no proof. We cannot hold, under the evidence, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negli*584gence as a matter of law. The jury found he was not guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of fact. The question was properly submitted to the jury.

While laying the issues before the jury the trial judge asked counsel for defendant if he had sufficiently covered the point as to the claimed duty of plaintiff at the time of the accident.' In reply counsel stated that the jury should be instructed as to the duty of plaintiff when he saw the train 1,272 feet away. Thereupon the court said to counsel:

“State what the duty was in your opinion, without argument, I have endeavored to state what his duty was, you state it and then I will state whether I agree with you or not.
“Counsel: I prefer not to do that at this time, your honor, I have fully and completely stated my opinion on that subject to your honor in the absence of the jury and I believe that that subject should be covered by the charge of the court.”

The court then proceeded to instruct the jury as follows:

“I, at the suggestion of counsel will state, I understand the claim of the defendant to be that immediately upon seeing the train that the plaintiff should have abandoned the car, made no effort to start the car or to proceed further if he was already starting the car with the starter, that he should stop that immediately and get off the car and thereby avoid injury to himself personally.
“The defendant claims that, not immediately leaving the car upon first seeing the train that the plaintiff was _ negligent and therefore guilty of contributory negligence and he cannot recover.
“Now, I understand this is what the defendant refers to in desiring me to charge- you further. I state that as his position.”

Counsel contend that the court thereby overstated the defendant’s claim to its prejudice, and also there was error in asking counsel to restate, in the presence *585of the jury, a matter fully presented on the motion to direct a verdict and there overruled. If the court overstated the defense, there was opportunity then and there to have correction made and it was the duty of counsel to so advise the court. But, did the court overstate the claim? In his motion for a directed verdict counsel made the claim that:

“Under his own testimony he was stalled upon the track before the train came into his view; that under the undisputed evidence it was at least 1,272 feet and probably farther away. That he knew the train was coming, knew he was in a place of danger, and took the chance of trying to start his engine, consuming all the time which elapsed between the time the train first came into his view, not less than 1,272 feet south of the point where he was stalled until the train was within five or six rods of the south end of the station, a distance of over a thousand feet, in an effort to examine his car and start it. That he made no effort to leave the car and save himself or his passengers until the train was within five or six rods of the south end of the station. That his reason for this was because he had confidence that the train would stop short of the crossing where he was stalled. That he had ample time while the train was running from the point where he could first see it to get himself and his ’passengers out and ter a place of safety, and to have pushed the car off the track instead of trying to start it. That if he had gotten out of the car when he saw the train coming and pushed his car a little to one side he would have been absolutely safe. * * * That he consumed so much time in attempting to start his car that he barely got his left leg out of the auto door at the time the train struck the auto.”

If plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence in trying to start his car, as he claimed, then there was no defense of contributory negligence, and it was not open to defendant to claim plaintiff remained in his automobile attempting to start it until the train was upon him. The only testimony in the case upon *586this subject was given by plaintiff, and was that he did no more than to look at the switch and step on the starter before attempting to leave the automobile.

If the speed of the train was 30 miles an hour it would travel 1,820 feet in 30 seconds. The train was about 1,272 feet away when first discovered by plaintiff and, while the record does not disclose its speed, beyond that, “it appeared to be coming very fast,” and “faster than usual,” it gave plaintiff but a few seconds before it reached him. Defendant was driven, by the undisputed testimony, to rely upon the claim that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in not leaving his automobile at once when he first saw the train coming, and there was no error in the court stating such to be defendant’s claim.

We find no reversible error and the judgment is affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.

Bird, Sharpe, Moore, and Steere, JJ., concurred with Wiest, C. J. McDonald, J., did not sit.