11 A.2d 203 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1939
Argued October 3, 1939. In this action the plaintiffs recovered for injuries to the wife plaintiff. The refusal of the court to enter judgment for the defendant n.o.v. is the error assigned.
On August 1, 1937 plaintiff, Margaret Acton, then 56 years of age, with her husband and son, boarded a passenger train at Camden and arrived at Atlantic City, their destination, about 11:00 A.M. The train was made up of ten steel passenger coaches of the vestibule type; the plaintiffs were riding in the fourth car from the rear of the train. Mrs. Acton testified that when the train stopped, she went to the vestibule at the rear of the car and while standing there preparing to leave the train, she looked at the steps in front of her and observed that the tread of the first step below the platform where she was standing was "worn right in the center" and "was very slippery and curved, very much worn and very smooth around the edge." The steps were constructed entirely of metal. Another witness testified that the upper step was very smooth with the edge worn down. There is, also, corroboration to the same effect in the testimony of the husband plaintiff and the son. The wife in stepping down upon the tread of *607 the step which she observed to be smooth, slippery, and worn, slipped and fell forward to the platform of the railway station and was injured. One passenger had preceded her; her husband followed carrying two suit cases, but Mrs. Acton was the only one who had difficulty in descending the steps.
The jury with propriety under the evidence, might have found that the defendant was not chargeable with negligence. The car was modern in construction and appliances, and the steps were constructed according to defendant's testimony, of a composition metal, cast integrally and especially adapted to that use. Since the issue, however, is whether the defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law notwithstanding the verdicts, the plaintiffs' testimony must be accepted as verity and all conflicts must be resolved in their favor.
The duty imposed upon the railroad is clear: "While a carrier is not bound to anticipate unusual and unexpected perils to its passengers either in transit or while entering or leaving its cars, yet its servants must be diligent at all times in protecting passengers from danger by the exercise of the highest degree of care which is reasonably practicable. It was the duty of the defendant, as a carrier of passengers for hire, not only to transport the plaintiff safely but to provide reasonably safe means of ingress and egress to and from the car." Mack v.Pittsburgh Rys. Co.,
We are of the opinion that plaintiffs' testimony viewed in its most favorable light charges the wife plaintiff with contributory negligence barring recovery.
Judgments reversed and directed to be entered for the defendant n.o.v.
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