205 F. 468 | 3rd Cir. | 1913
The case before us arises out of an action in the court below for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff below (plaintiff in error), on a grandstand controlled by the defendant below (defendant in error), at the Forbes Field Baseball Park, in the city of Pittsburgh.
On the afternoon of September 16, 1911, plaintiff, having paid his admission, was going along a passageway on the first floor of the grandstand, toward the elevators, to be taken up to his box in one of tlie galleries. On that particular afternoon, the defendant had allowed to remain open an iron trapdoor, three feet square, covering an opening in the main floor of the grandstand, leading to the machinery beneath that operated the elevators. When shut, the door was flush with the cement floor, and formed part of the floor of the passageway. When open, the top of the door faced the elevators and narrowed the passageway between it and the elevators, according to the presumably accurate measurement of the blueprint in evidence, to a width of five feet. It was testified that there were about 20,000 people at the game on that particular afternoon, and many hundreds' of them who used the elevators had to pass through this narrow passageway. The door, when raised, stood at an angle of about 80 or 85 degrees from the plane of the opening which it was designed to cover, and was held rigidly in place by brace irons on either side of it.
A great crowd of people were pressing through this passageway between the uplifted door and the elevators, which became more dense at that point from the pressure of those behind, as the guard rails to the elevators only admitted one at a time. The onl^ testimony as to how the accident happened was that of the plaintiff himself. _ The following is the essential part of his testimony, as it appears in the record:
"The crowd was progressing towards the rear to get into the elevator. I was going along, without any idea of any obstruction in the way. The point at which you pass around to get into the elevator, around the guard, Is only a very short distance from the trapdoor, which was propped open, — I should say not more than six or seven feet [the evidence of the bine print is live feet], — and this dense crowd liad to go through that small opening. Somebody jostled me, and I couldn’t see anything, lost my balance, and went right over this thing. Nobody could possibly have escaped it in the position I was in. The trapdoor extended about three feet, and I fell over and doubled up like a jackknife.”
“Well, the crowd was surging through here (indicating) to get around here (indicating) to get into the elevator. I was coming around, the crowd. I was on the outside, the crowd surging around here. * * * There isn’t a very strong light here, and if you are not watching for that thing, with the crowd around you it is hard to find. I was in this crowd and somebody jostled me, and I went over the edge of it I tripped here first and lost my balance.”
On cross-examination, also, he says:
“There was difficulty on this particular occasion, because the crowd was so dense nobody could have seen -it. I was all around in that crowd, a swirling crowd, trying to get through a seven-foot opening. I should say there were several hundred people ahead of me, waiting to get up on the elevator. I recall that there were 20,000 people there that day.”
The case was submitted to the jury with a charge by the court, and a verdict was rendered for the defendant. After refusal of a motion by plaintiff for a hew trial, to the judgment entered on this verdict, the present writ of error has been sued out by the plaintiff. The assignments of error are founded upon exceptions to certain portions of the charge of the court. The question raised by these assignments concerns the propriety, in relation to the facts of the case, of what was said by'the court in its charge, as to the proximate cause of the injury suffered by the plaintiff. The parts of the charge excepted to are as follows:
“Now if you find the defendant was not negligent, then that is the end of this case, but if you find the defendant was negligent, there is another question that you are to consider, and that is, whether that negligence was a direct and proximate cause of the injuries to the plaintiff. - * * * If the plaintiff was jostled or pushed and thereby forced upon this hatchway, door, and if he would not have come in contact with the hatchway door except for that, then you may conclude that the jostling or pushing was the direct and primary cause of the injury. If the pushing and jostling was the direct cause of the injury to the plaintiff, then you could not hold the defendant for injuries which were caused by another. * * * I think one of the witnesses testified there was some loss of power and the engineer had to go down and start up the power. That might have caused an unnecessary and an unusual crowd there, but if the pushing and jostling was the direct and efficient cause of the injuries to the plaintiff, without which he would not have fallen over the grating and had been hurt, then the verdict should be for the defendant, because you cannot- — should not make one party pay for what another party has brought about, but you are to consider all the facts in the case and determine whether or not the jostling and pushing was the direct and proximate cause, or primary cause, or whether it was the open hatchway door.”
We are compelled to differ from the learned and careful judge of the court bélow, in the view here taken of the application of the rule, “Causa próxima, non remota spectatur.” It would answer no good purpose to indulge in the subtleties of abstract reasoning to which this maxim so often gives rise. In its juridical sense, it would seem incapable of such definition as would furnish a practical test of liability or nonliability in a given case. The terms used do not accurately connote the conceptions they are intended to cover. Whether “proximate” means “nearest” in point' of time or space to the result complained of, depends upon circumstances. “Primary” may sometimes
Parsons, in his work on -Contracts (6th Ed. vol. 3, p. 179), says:
“Not only is there no definite rule or clear and precise principle given, by which we may measure the nearness or remoteness of effect in this respect; but the highest judicial authorities are so directly antagonistic, that they scarcely serve as guides to lead us to a conclusion. * *_ * We have been disposed to think that there is a principle, derivable on the one hand from the general reason and justice of tlie question and on the oilier hand applicable as a test, in many cases, and perhaps useful, if not decisive, in all. It is that every defendant shall he held liable for all of those consequences which might have been foreseen end. expected as the result of his conduct, but not for those which he could not have foreseen, and was therefore under no moral obligation to take Into his consideration.'’
• Eor this rule, the author refers to the high authority of Pollock, Chief Baron, in Rigby v. Hewitt, 5 Exch. 240. This rule, so far as it extends, satisfies the reason and common sense which is the essence of the common law, and is applicable to the present case.
The defendant owned or controlled the premises upon which tlie accident, which resulted in the injury complained of, happened. The building was erected for the accommodation of the large crowds that gather to witness the athletic contests and games, which were conducted by the defendant for profit, the public being invited to patronize the same. The entrance and passageway along which the plaintiff proceeded after paying the sum demanded for his admission, was necessarily for tlie accommodation of the crowds who were expected to throng such places of amusement. It is not contradicted that, on the holiday afternoon in question, about 20,000 people were present to witness a game of baseball that excited the public interest. The testimony of tlie plaintiff is not contradicted, that many hundreds were crowding through the passageway described, which led to elevators, by which persons were taken to galleries on an upper tier or floor. That the iron trapdoor in the concrete floor, on the afternoon in question and while the crowd was pressing along the passageway, had been left open by some one in the employ of the defendant, is not denied. This open door, facing the elevators, narrowed the passageway between them and it to a width of about five feet, and, according to the uncontradicted testimony of the plaintiff, the crowd at that point became dense from the pressure of those behind, and from the fact that only one person at a time could pass through the guard rails to the elevators. The plaintiff says he was on the outside of this crowd;
No question of proximate cause is here involved. The only question which should have been submitted to the jury is the simple one of the defendant’s negligence. The charge was, not that there was negligence in the location of the trapdoor opening, but in the alleged improper raising of the trapdoor, and allowing it to stand as a barrier in the pathway of persons approaching the elevator. In disposing of this question, the jury should be told that they were to take into consideration the conditions which would naturally arise in the presence of a crowd, hnd defendant should be held liable for those consequences (and those consequences only) which might have been foreseen and expected as a result of its conduct in permitting the trapdoor, under the circumstances, to remain open. But, as said by Mr. Justice Colt, in Hill v. Winsor, 118 Mass. 251:
“It is not necessary that injury in the precise form in which it in fact resulted should have been foreseen. It is enough that it now appears to have been a natural and probable consequence.”
We are therefore compelled to the conclusion that the learned judge of the court below was in error, in submitting to the jury, as was done in those portions of his charge upon which the assignments are based, the question, whether the negligence of the defendant, if .found by them, was the direct and proximate cause of the injuries to the plaintiff, or, whether the jostling and pushing was the proximate or primary cause. The “surging crowd” and the '"“jostling” were in no sense the juridical cause of the accident, though they were the conditions which might make the negligence of the defendant the efficient cause.
The judgment below is therefore reversed, with directions for a venire de novo.