76 N.J.L. 741 | N.J. | 1908
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The ease made by the plaintiff was that the defendant company notified him that a carload of stone consigned to him had been received by it, and that he was required to unload it within a fixed time if he wished to avoid the payment of demurrage; that plaintiff, with his servants, went upon the company’s property for the purpose of unload
The plaintiff was on defendant’s premises by invitation, for the placing of the car upon the side track where it could be unloaded, and the notification to unload, was an invitation to go upon the defendant’s premises for that purpose, and defendant owed to plaintiff a degree of care co-extensive with it, but the extent of the invitation is the limit of defendant’s duty in the premises, and the extent of such duty must be gathered by implication from the circumstances established by the undisputed testimony. We are asked in this case to
Mr. Justice Garrison, in speaking for this court in Furey v. New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Co., 38 Vroom 270, said: “Implied invitation, therefore, is a part of the law of negligence by which an obligation to use reasonable care arises from the conduct of the parties; its essence is that the defendant knew, or ought to have known, that something that he was doing or permitting to be done might give rise in an ordinarily discerning-mind to a natural belief that he intended that to be done which his conduct had led the plaintiff to believe that he intended. It is not enough that the user believed that the use was intended; he must bring his belief home to the owner by pointing to some act or conduct of his that afforded a reasonable basis for such a belief.”
No inference can be drawn from the evidence in this case that the defendant knew, or ought to have known, that when it invited the plaintiff on its premises for the purpose of unloading the car, he would bring there a timber fourteen feet in length and so place it on the car as to project over it a sufficient distance to come in contact with trains passing along another track, and there is no evidence of any act or conduct of the defendant that affords a reasonable basis for the claim that it had led the plaintiff to believe that it intended its invitation to go to that extent. Nor is there any evidence to support a reasonable inference that the plaintiff, had any such belief.
The application of the rule always depends upon the particular facts of the case under consideration, for the owner’s liability is only eo-extensive with his invitation, and it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that, at the time the injury was received, he was acting within the limit of his
In this case the invitation was to go upon the premises, and by necessary implication with horses, wagons and required appliances, to unload the car on the side of it away from the main line, and the mere using of the main track, in the absence of any notification, that in carrying out the purpose of the invitation the plaintiff was about to infringe on that track, was no breach of the invitation given.
The judgment below should be affirmed.
For affirmance—The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Garrison, Swayze, Reed, Tren chard, Parker, Bergen, Voorhees, Minturn, Bogert, Veedenburgi-i, Vroom, Green, Gray, Dill, J.J. 16.
For reversal—Hone.