Appellee was' a passenger on a street car operated in the City of Washington by Transit Company (appellant). She was injured as the result of a collision between the street car and a truck owned by Ambassador Laundry and brought this suit against both Transit and Laundry Companies. The complaint alleged general negligence against Transit Company and violation by Laundry Company of city traffic ordinances. At the trial appellee testified that at the time of the collision she was a passenger of Transit Company, occupying a seat immediately behind the operator of the car, and that without any fault on her part she was injured as a result of the collision. She called as witnesses the drivers of the car and the truck, who testified that they were in charge of their respective vehicles at the time of the collision. No further testimony was offered by any party.
Both Transit Company and Laundry Company moved for directed verdicts on the ground that appellee had failed to show against either of them any act of negligence. Both motions were granted and, on appeal to the Municipal Court of Appeals, the judgment in favor of Laundry Company was affirmed, and the judgment with respect to Transit Company was reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial on the ground that as against the latter a prima facie case was made which entitled appellee to go to the jury. 1
We allowed an appeal at the instance of Transit Company. No appeal to us was requested from the judgment dismissing Laundry Company from the proceeding. Transit Company’s position in this court is that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply because, there having been no charge of “failure of the means of transportation,” and the injury having been caused by a collision between two moving vehicles, only one of which was under the control of petitioner, no presumption of negligence arose out of the occurrence. As a preliminary question Transit Company argued that appellee, having failed to examine the drivers of the two vehicles whom she called to the stand as to the cause of the collision, thereby failed to present evidence within her power, and accordingly an inference arose that the evidence, if offered, would have been unfavorable. But we need not stop to notice this. The main question, namely, whether res ipsa applies in the case of a collision between a carrier and another vehicle, over which the carrier has no control, presents greater difficulties. An examination of the cases shows a wide divergence of view in different States. Those which hold that the fact' of collision is not sufficient evidence of negligence in the case of an injured passenger, and accordingly that res ipsa has no application, include Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wyoming 2 On the other hand, Ari *841 zona, Arkansas, California, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island and West Virginia hold that proof of the collision is sufficient of itself to create a prima facie case. 3 Several federal cases sustain this view. 4
Some of the decisions hold that a “presumption” arise?, some a “permissible inference,” others a “'prima facie case,” and in still others that the burden of proof is shifted to the defendant. The confusion is added to by the continued use of the words res ipsa loquitur to describe all of these rules without distinguishing among them. 5 But whatever the result of the application of the rule in other jurisdictions, in the District of Columbia the rule is that, when res ipsa is applicable, it permits an inference of negligence and thus establishes a prima facie case, or, in other words, makes a case to be decided by a jury. 6 But it does not shift the burden of the proof. When all the evidence is in, the question for the jury still is whether the preponderance is with the plaintiff.
Though the question in the precise conditions we have here has not before arisen in this jurisdiction, the view has always been that a carrier of passengers is subject to certain definite responsibilities which, without a showi: that these were discharged, will justify an inference of negligence.
7
And this rule, as applied in cases of collisions between two moving vehicles, is stated in Plumb v. Richmond Light & Ry.,
Here appellee, by the aid of a legal rule made out a prima facie case, but no more. If Transit Company had offered evidence of due care, the jury’s verdict might well have gone against her. On the new trial ordered by the Municipal Court of Appeals the question will be for the jury, when all the evidence is in, whether the preponderance is with the plaintiff.
From what has been said it follows that the opinion of the Municipal Court of Appeals in reversing the judgment in favor of the Transit Company and awarding a new trial was in all respects correct.
Affirmed.
Notes
Jackson v. Capital Transit Co., D.C. Mun.App.,
Colorado: Yellow Cab Co. v. Hodgson,
Arizona: Pickwick Stages Corp. v. Messinger,
44
Ariz. 174,
North Jersey St. Ry. v. Purdy, 3 Cir.,
See 9 Wigmore, Evidence § 2569; Prosser, supra, note 2.
Sweeney v. Erving,
Ibid; cf. Gleeson v. Virginia Midland Ry.,
Francis v. Fitzpatrick,
