161 Mass. 393 | Mass. | 1894
This is an action for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while leaving an open electric car of the defendant on Charles Street in Boston, near Chestnut Street, between nine and ten o’clock in the morning of July 14, 1892. Charles Street runs north and south, and is crossed at right angles by
On getting near to Chestnut Street, which was a regular stopping place, the plaintiff motioned to the conductor to stop the car. He gave a signal accordingly to the motor man, and the car was slowed up gradually, and was stopped with its rear platform some feet over the crossing of Chestnut Street and opposite the excavation. The plaintiff testified that she had a parcel of sulky seats which she put under her left arm, took her lunch bag in her left hand, and with her right hand took hold of the handle of the seat on which she had been sitting, glanced round to see if there were any carriages coming, and stepped off, but did not look to see where she was s'eppina'; that there was nothing to prevent her seeing the excavation if she had looked; and that she put her right foot on to the running board, and her left foot toward the ground, and fell on her left side. She also testified that she did not know that the excavation was there ; and that she knew that the car could not stop on an intersecting street. A regulation of the board of aldermen of the city of Boston was put in evidence, which provides as follows : “ No person having the control of the speed of a street railway car shall stop any such car on a cross-walk or in front of an intersecting street except to avoid collisions or to prevent danger to persons in the street.”
At the close of the evidence, the presiding justice directed a verdict for the defendant; and the"case comes before us on the
These questions are material only upon the point whether the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care. But it is unnecessary to consider them, or to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant a jury in finding that she was in the exercise of due care, as we are of opinion that the exceptions show no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant.
A passenger on a street car has no right to expect that the street between the track and the sidewalk shall be in such a condition that he can safely pass over it. When he leaves the car he ceases to be a passenger, and becomes merely a traveller upon the highway. Creamer v. West End Street Railway, 156 Mass. 320.
The plaintiff, however, contends that, as there was evidence that the conductor and motonnan knew the condition that the street was in, they ought not to have stopped the car where they did, or should have cautioned the plaintiff not to get off on the westerly side, or have stopped on Chestnut Street. It is a sufficient answer to the last contention, that the exceptions do not show that there was time to stop the car on Chestnut Street after the plaintiff signified her desire to leave. So far as appears, the signal to stop was given at once, and the car slowed up in the usual manner.
As to the other contení ions, we are of opinion that those in charge of the car had the right to assume that the plaintiff understood the situation. She sat on the side of the car next to the excavation, and had it in sight for some distance in going between Mount Vernon Street and Chestnut Street. It was in the forenoon, and everything was plainly visible. The difference between the then level of the street and its former level was not so great as to render it especially hazardous for a passenger to leave the car there, or to make it necessary for those in charge of the car to refuse to stop the car or to caution a passenger as to alighting. While we do not say that the plaintiff was negligent, as matter of law, in not looking to see where she was stepping, it is plain that a jury would be warranted in so finding; and it seems to us, in considering the question of the negligence
The case differs widely from that of Richmond City Railway v. Scott, 86 Va. 902. In that case a closed street car stopped, in the night-time, with its rear platform on the side of a trench, twelve or fourteen feet in length, fifteen feet deep, and three feet wide. A passenger stepped from the platform into the trench, and the railway company was held liable, on the ground that the car ought not to have stopped there, or the plaintiff should have been warned, and directed to leave the car by the other side. Exceptions overruled.