The evidence certified upon this appeal is substantially that certified upon the first appeal as reported in 95 Conn. 437, 111 A. 621, except in one particular, viz., the testimony of the plaintiff's witness Donahue as to the distance in which the car which struck the plaintiff's intestate could have been stopped when traveling at assumed rates of speed. The facts which, upon the former appeal, we said might have been reasonably found by the jury might, by the present jury, have been reasonably found, and need not be repeated here. We said upon the former appeal that the case must be decided upon the application of the so-called last-clear-chance doctrine. The motorman did not see the decedent or other passengers waiting to board his car at a regular stopping place of defendant company, although they were in plain view, *Page 453 and did not slow down his car, nor intend to, nor endeavor to make a stop at this stopping place. The decedent stood so near the track as to be in peril from the approaching car.
Whether the motorman ought at any time to have known that decedent probably would not move back out of danger, was an inference of fact which the jury might reasonably have made. Whether, thereafter, the motorman had the opportunity, in the exercise of reasonable care, to have saved the decedent from harm, we think was also a question of fact fairly before the jury for their decision. That decision depended upon where the car was when the motorman ought to have known that the decedent was not about to remove herself from peril, and whether, thereafter, by stopping the car, or slowing down its speed, or giving warning, he would have avoided running his car upon the decedent. Since the car could not, upon the evidence, on this grade and at the speed it was traveling, have been stopped in less than three hundred feet, and the motorman, if keeping a lookout, might well have anticipated from that distance that the decedent would have removed herself from this place of danger, the jury could not reasonably have found that the motorman could have stopped the car after he ought to have known that the decedent would not endeavor to remove herself from this place of danger.
But had he been keeping a reasonable lookout, as soon as he ought to have known that the decedent probably would not remove herself from this place of danger, it was his duty to have endeavored to have stopped his car in the most expeditious manner reasonably possible, and to have given the decedent notice of her danger by gong and otherwise. The jury might reasonably have found that by the slowing down of the car and the warning of danger, the decedent would *Page 454 have been apprised of her dangerous situation, and then have removed herself therefrom, and that thus the motorman could, by the exercise of reasonable care after he knew the decedent was oblivious of her peril, have avoided running his car into her.
There is no error.