132 Minn. 118 | Minn. | 1916
At about 7 a. m. on June 6, .1914, plaintiff took passage on one of defendant’s freight trains running from New Lisbon to Wausau, in Wisconsin. The train consisted of nine cars, one an ordinary caboose. At way stations it stopped and the usual switching operations were performed. A little after noon the train stopped at the station of Rudolph. It was ahead of its time, and after switching operations were finished, it stood for some minutes near the station. After a few minutes the trainmen discovered that the train was blocking a crossing, and it was backed up a short distance. At this point of time plaintiff was standing on the front platform of the caboose, and about opposite the coupling, sitting upon, of leaning her back against, the railing. In some manner her toes were caught in the coupling and injured. She recovered a verdict and defendant appeals.
Claim is made of a custom on this train on this day to warn passengers before moving the train after it had once come to a stop. We have read the evidence with care, and we are clear that no such contention can be sustained. The evidence on behalf of plaintiff is that the trainmen sometimes notified the passengers when the train was about to leave a station. The train was not about to leave the station. There is also evidence that sometimes during switching operations, if the rear brakeman was near the rear of the train when the train was about to move, he would notify passengers of that fact; but there is no evidence from which it could be said that there had arisen any custom, or that these incidents had occurred with such frequency that passengers could reasonably expect to receive notice of all switching movements of the train.
Por the reasons given, the verdict cannot stand and judgment must be awarded for defendant.
So ordered-.