Action by a passenger against a common carrier to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the carrier. The judgment was for plaintiff in the sum
The act of negligence averred in the petition is “that while said train was being so operated by defendant upon its tracks, near the said city of Junction City, Kansas, the defendant, by its agents, servants and employees in charge thereof, carelessly and negligently operated and ran and operated said train in such manner that the same was wrecked and one of the coaches thereof thrown down an embankment over which defendant’s track ran and the car of said train in which this plaintiff was riding was so jarred, jostled and shaken that the plaintiff was thrown from her seat in said car and upon and against other seats thereof and upon the floor of said car and was thereby greatly injured.” The answer is a general denial. . •
First, it is argued by defendant that its request for an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence should have been given. The evidence of plaintiff discloses this state of facts: On the nineteenth of September, 1904, plaintiff, then sixteen years of age, was a passenger on one of defendant’s passenger trains. She had boarded the train at Union, Oregon, and her destination was Kansas City. At the time of her injury, the equipment of the train consisted of a baggage and mail car, three passenger cars, a dining car, and four sleeping cars, the first of which was a tourist car. Plaintiff was seated in one of the rear chairs of the middle passenger coach, which was a chair car. Following, was one of the coaches, the dining car, and the sleeping cars. At a point near Junction City, the dining and sleeping cars were derailed from some cause not shown, while the train was running at a speed variously estimated from twenty to forty miles per hour. The car in which plaintiff was riding did not leave the track. Emergency brakes were applied and the train was quickly brought to a standstill, but not until after the rear sleeper had
No other witness testified to seeing plaintiff fall from her seat in the car, and defendant introduced a large number of witnesses, many of whom were, fellow passengers with plaintiff, who testified that so far as they observed, no passenger in the chair car was injured or unseated by the disturbance occasioned by the derailment and subsequent stop. A little girl who was riding next to plaintiff testified that plaintiff was seated by the window and was not thrown from her seat nor hurt-in any manner. Defendant contends that as the testimony of plaintiff is unsupported and is contradicted by so many reputable and disinterested witnesses, it should
The principle followed by us in the case of Lehnick v. Railway,
All of the witnesses for defendant admit that the rear cars of the train were derailed as claimed by plaintiff. Some of. them appear to think that the effect of this disaster on the chair car was not sufficiently pronounced
On the finding by the jury that plaintiff was injured in being thrown from her seat by the violent motion of the car and that such motion was produced by the derailment of the cars in the rear of the train and by the application of the emergency brakes, the burden of proof under which plaintiff rested at the beginning of the trial was fully discharged, since the derailment of the cars and the application of the brakes are conceded facts. Given an injury to a passenger caused by a casualty to' the vehicle in which he is riding, a presumption of negligence on the part of the carrier arises which becomes conclusive on its failure to produce rebutting testimony.. As was said in Clark v. Railway,
Criticism is made of an instruction given by the court on the measure of damages, but so obviously is the point without merit that its discussion would serve no useful purpose.
The judgment is affirmed.
