52 Pa. Super. 561 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1913
Opinion by
The plaintiff, a woman about fifty years of age, was injured in attempting to get aboard a car of the defendant at a street corner. Her testimony as to the circumstances was substantially as follows: After the car had come to a full stop, she took hold of the rail with her right hand and put her right foot on the step, but before she could get aboard the bell was rung and the car suddenly started. She then tried to climb on the car, but could not, and had to hop along on one foot about half a car length. She hung on as long as she could, when her grip loosened and she reeled round in the street and fell into a pool of mud and water,, receiving the injuries for which she brought this action. The body of the car, as well as the platform, was crowded. She did not see the conductor and did not know where he was. Nor did she know who rang the bell or from what part of the car the cord was pulled. Pier testimony, corroborated by that of George Harkins, a passenger, constituted her case in chief, so far as the circumstances of the accident were concerned.
In the presentation of its side of the case, the defendant adduced the testimony of the conductor to the effect that he had gone inside to collect the fares of passengers who had boarded the car at the street next below, a,nd was on
Assuming the facts to be as testified by the plaintiff and her witness, and applying well-settled legal principles, the starting of the car must be deemed a negligent act and the proximate cause of the injury. Further, as the starting of the car, after taking on and letting off passengers at proper stopping places, was committed to the motorman and conductor and was under their control, and as the method and appliances for signaling the motorman to start were selected by the defendant, the starting of the car in this instance was an act which, in the nature of things, the defendant reasonably would be expected to be able to account for, and the plaintiff would not be. Therefore, in the absence of evidence accounting for the negligent act, the jury would be justified in concluding that the employees of the defendant in charge of the car, with authority to regulate its movement, were responsible for it. It follows that the testimony of the plaintiff and her witness, if believed by the jury, made out a prima facie case, even though she was unable to testify who pulled the bell. This is not inferring negligence on the part of the defendant from the mere happening of the accident, but is the proper application of the principle that, where the thing which causes the injury is shown to be under the
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.