86 Minn. 224 | Minn. | 1902
Plaintiff, as administratrix, seeks to recover for the death of her son, occurring through the alleged negligence of defendant, who demurs to the complaint upon the ground that it does not state a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained, from which order plaintiff appeals.
The essential facts in the complaint are as follows: During the summer season of 1901 defendant operated trains between Minneapolis and points on Lake Minnetonka. Defendant’s passenger station is near the center of the city, and its tracks extend four miles westerly therefrom within the corporate limits. Two-fifths of a mile west of the depot its railroad passes under a bridge on Lyndale avenue. It is claimed that the defendant negligently maintains its tracks so close to the posts which support this bridge that the sides of its cars pass within ten inches of the same. At
The position of the defendant in support of the order of the trial court is that intestate, by extending his person beyond the line of the car while in motion, committed an act of negligence, which was the proximate cause of his injury, and therefore precludes recovery.
Subject to the qualifications above stated, the courts have not been able to impose upon railway carriers burdens so unreasonable that they could not be fulfilled, nor have passengers been relieved from the exercise of restraint from the curiosity which prompts them to expose their persons to the imminent risk of collision with objects outside of cars. Car windows and doors are for the admission of light and air, not to enable passengers to pursue a course which general experience declares to be extremely hazardous. The proper use of platforms is to afford travelers a safe and convenient means of entrance and exit to and from the cars when not in motion. But it follows, in view of the conditions above stated, that the voluntary exposure of the body beyond the sides of a moving train, or the improper use of the platform when safety is assured within the car, must be regarded, as reckless, and the almost inevitable disaster that follows remediless. These conclusions are supported by the great weight of authority in this country. Beach, Contrib. Neg. (2d Ed.) § 155; Todd v. Old Colony, 3 Allen, 18; Id., 7 Allen, 207; Pittsburg v. McClurg, 56 Pa. St. 294; Indianapolis v. Rutherford, 29 Ind. 82; Favre v. Louisville, 91 Ky. 541, 16 S. W. 370; Georgia Pacific v. Underwood, 90 Ala. 49, S South. 116; Moakler v. Willamette, 18 Ore. 189, 22 Pac. 948; Carrico v. West Virginia, 35 W. Va. 389, 14 S. E. 12; Richmond v. Scott, 88 Va. 958, 14 S. E. 763; Scheiber v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry. Co., 61 Minn. 499, 63 N. W. 1034.
In a large measure the learned counsel for appellant concedes the rule as laid' down in the cases cited. We quote from his thorough and exhaustive brief as follows:
“I concede that, as a general rule, a passenger who stands on the platform, or protrudes his head out of the window or outside of the outer line of the car, on a rapidly moving train on an ordinary steam railroad, under ordinary circumstances, and is thereby injured, is guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.”
We are unable to give force to the view that the speed of the train is of significance, for it was moving with sufficient rapidity to make the exposure of any part of the body dangerous, as the unfortunate accident in this case demonstrates. The misleading appearance of the overhead bridges may have excited curiosity, •but cannot justify a dangerous exposure, which was not necessary, particularly as defendant was required to announce the stations when reached, and this legal duty was admittedly performed; hence we cannot hold that, curiosity alone can furnish an excuse for negligent self-exposure in such cases.
The allegation of the custom of passengers to extend their heads beyond the sides of th.e car with the knowledge and consent of defendant, it is claimed, required warnings of the danger incurred thereby. These facts undoubtedly charged a reckless habit of the passengers thus exposing themselves. The general rule denying liability when accidents occur in such cases rests upon the ground that such conduct is so hazardous within the range of common experience that all travelers must and should have knowledge thereof, and that dangers from such causes should be so well known and anticipated that specific warning ought not to be required, and would be useless if given. These considerations have all been carefully weighed and answered in the evolution of the rule forbidding unnecessary exposure of their persons by travelers on railways in the cases cited above, and have not been considered sufficient to modify its force, so as to be the subject of innovation in this respect. The fact that the train on which intestate was a passen
If railway companies subject their trains to the same uses adopted on urban electric or trolley cars, and receive compensation for carrying passengers upon the platforms of the same, they cannot avoid responsibility for an injury arising merely from the occupation of such places by their patrons to which the injured party does not contribute. Reem v. St. Paul City Ry. Co., 77 Minn. 503, 80 N. W. 638. Had intestate fallen from the train by reason. of its being overcrowded, or had he been pushed therefrom by causes attributable to the dangerous course of conduct pursued by defendant in allowing passengers to ride on its platforms, we could not hold that intestate’s conduct was negligent; but the complaint rests plaintiff’s right to recover upon the expressed ground that the accident resulted from the action of intestate himself. It is alleged therein that at the inopportune moment he then leaned out slightly and looked ahead as. said train moved along, to see if it was arriving or had arrived at its destination. This averment repels the inference that the efficient cause of the accident was the overcrowding of the train; and, while his position on the platform may be excused by the course of defendant, it was the voluntary act of the unfortunate youth himself, wherein he exercised his own judgment, and took chances, which resulted in his death. Under the admissions of the plaintiff, her son’s conduct can no more excuse him from negligence, than in the case of a passenger within the car, who protrudes his head from a window and is struck by a passing train.
It remains to consider whether the immature age of intestate would, as a matter of law, demand a submission to a jury of the question of his capacity to appreciate the risks incurred. The allegation in the complaint in this respect is that he “was sixteen years of age.” There' are no facts alleged to show lack of intelligence, discretion, or ability ordinarily exercised by persons of that age. The rule of care imposed upon persons of immature years
The order appealed from is affirmed.