71 Pa. Super. 103 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
The plaintiffs brought this action of trespass to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by Mrs. Baron when alighting from a car of the defendant company. They recovered verdicts and judgments in the court below and the defendant appeals. Mrs. Baron testified that she had, about eight o’clock on the evening of September 8, 1913, in company with her child and a niece, taken an open summer car of the defendant company, with a running board along the entire side, which she had difficulty in mounting because of its height from the ground, and ridden to Miner’s Mills to visit a friend. Returning from Miner’s Mills about two hours later she boarded another open car and again had such difficulty in mounting the running board that she required the assistance of the friend whom she had been visiting. Arriving at the public square, Wilkes-Barre, about ten p. m., at the same place where she had entered the other car about two hours earlier, her niece alighted and took the child from the car, and she (Mrs. Baron) attempted to alight alone, without asking for assistance, by stepping on the running board and from the running board to the pavement. She described the manner in which the accident occurred as follows: “I held on to the car, and stepped off the running board with my left foot, and then I let my right foot down and kind of left loose and it seemed just as if there was a hole there.....and it kind of went under, my foot went under, and I went against the tree, my shoulder and my head.” “Q. Did you see a hole there”? “A. No, sir, I didn’t, it was dark when I looked out.” She testified that she . suffered a severe injury to her right ankle, which required medical treatment for a considerable period, rendered her incompetent to perform her usual duties and that she remained crippled down until the time of the trial. When
The plaintiffs’ statement of claim charged that the defendant company had been negligent in three particulars: (1) Failure to provide a safe and proper place for plaintiff to alight; (2) Failure to provide a stool or other device to assist her in alighting; and (3) Failure of defendant company’s employees on the car to assist her in alighting. The plaintiff testified that the employees of the company failed to furnish any stool or bench upon which she might step from the running board and that they made no offer to assist her to alight, but she admitted that she had not requested assistance. There was no evidence in the case from which a jury should have been permitted to find that the car in question was so constructed that normal individuals using
The first assignment of error relates to the refusal of the court below to charge that “No presumption of negligence on the part of the defendant company arises by reason of the fact that the plaintiff had been a passenger •upon its car and was in the act . of alighting, under the
There is no presumption that it is the duty of a street railway company to maintain the streets or sidewalks of the highways through which its lines pass. There was, however, in this case evidence tending to show that this defendant company had at least contributed to the original construction of the pavement in question. The contract under which the work was done was actually in court but. it does not seem to have been offered in evidence, although a witness was permitted to testify without objection to a part of its contents. Several of the witnesses refer to the sidewalk and all of them make a distinction between the pavement upon which the plaintiff alighted and the sidewalk. The tracks of the defendant company are repeatedly referred to as between the sidewalk and the curb. The cartway of the street,
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.