Carr v. River & Eureka Railroad

98 Cal. 366 | Cal. | 1893

Garoutte, J.

—Respondent recovered five thousand dollars damages for personal injuries, claimed to have been sustained by her through the negligence of appellant, and this appeal is prosecuted from the judgment and order denying a motion for a new trial. The first count of the complaint relies for a recovery upon the theory that plaintiff, a passenger, was not allowed a reasonable time to alight from the train at Rhouerville, her point of destination, but that appellant negligently and carelessly started the train while she was upon the steps of the coach, preparatory to alighting, and thereby threw her to the ground, causing permanent injuries.

The second count of the complaint is based upon the allegations that appellant negligently carried its coach in which she Avas seated beyond the platform for the use of passengers alighting from the cars at said station, and stopped the said coach at an unsuitable place for passengers to alight therefrom; that respondent attempted to alight, but appellant failed to allow her a reasonable time within which to do so, and while she Avas upon the steps of the coach, attempting to leave the train, the coach Avas started, she was thrown to the ground, and the injuries received. The answer denies negligence upon the part of the railroad company and alleges contributory negligence upon the part of the respondent, in this, that she attempted to alight from the train while it was in motion, and after it had started from the station. There was some evidence offered by appellant tending to support its contention, in this regard.

It is claimed that the law is not properly declared in instructions 6 and 7, which read as MIoavs: —

“6. It is the duty of the carrier of passengers to stop the train a sufficient length of time to enable passengers to alight in safety, and to hold the train still during such time. It is negligence for the carrier to start the train Avithout warning passengers after making such stop, and before the passenger has had a reasonable time to leave the car. Should the carrier start the train while the passenger is on the steps of the car, in the act of alighting, Avithout giving sufficient time to alight, and without giving notice to the passenger, Avhereby the passenger is thrown from the car and injured, then the carrier is *370of negligence, and is responsible in damages for all the injuries caused the passenger by such negligent act.
“ 7. Should yon find from the evidence that on the fourth day of May, 1890, plaintiff was a passenger on the train of defendant from Alton to Ehonerville station, that the train was stopped on its arrival at Ehonerville station for passengers to leave the cars; that immediately upon the stoppage of the train the plaintiff left her seat in the car, and went out upon the platform or steps of the car for the purpose of alighting; that the defendant started the train before the plaintiff had time to leave the car, and while she was on the steps of the car in the act of leaving it, without giving her notice or warning; and that the plaintiff was thrown from the car by its starting and injured without fault on her part, then, in that event, I charge you that your verdict must be for the plaintiff for the damages sustained by her, not exceeding the amount claimed in the complaint.”

The principle of law involved in the foregoing instructions is the same, and considering them together, it is clearly stated and entirely correct. An elementary principle governing the conduct of common carriers of the character of appellant is contained in these charges of the court, and that is, it is the duty of a railroad company to stop its train at a station a reasonable time in order that passengers may get on and off its cars with safety to themselves. The court incorporates an additional principle into the instruction, to the effect that, if such common carrier does not stop its train for a reasonable length of time in order that passengers may get on and off, it is guilty of negligence in starting the train without notice or warning that it is about to start. It is first declared that the railroad company must stop at each station a reasonable time, and if injury results to passengers owing to its failure so to do, then it is guilty of negligence. Such being the law, and the soundness of the proposition cannot be doubted, the additional element incorporated into the charge of the court becomes self-evident as an unquestioned legal principle. The law demands of a common carrier of passengers for hire that he observe the utmost caution, characteristic of a very careful, prudent man. The carrier is bound to use the greatest care and diligence in the transporta*371tiou of passengers, consistent with the carrying on of his business, and in view of these demands of the law, appellant has no just cause of complaint against this portion of the court’s charge.

Ui >on the part of the appellant evidence was introduced to the effect that respondent jumped from the train while it was iu motion, and it is now contended that if such was the fact, it was negligence per se upon her part, and the court should have instructed the jury to that effect. Conceding that respondent alighted from the train while in motion, there was some evidence in the case tending to show that the train did not stop at the station a sufficient length of time to enable passengers to alight with safety; that the respondent was upon the lower step of the coach, preparatory to alighting, when the train started, and that the train had traveled a distance of less than one hundred feet when she jumped, conceding that she did jump. No evidence is disclosed by the record as to the rate of speed the train was traveling at that moment, and upon this state of tacts the court gave the jury the following instruction:—■

“Ordinarily a passenger would be held not to be justified in getting off the train while it is in motion, except at his own risk. Unless the train is moving very slowly, and the circumstances are specially favorable, it would be deemed prima facie negligence. It is not necessarily so, however, and if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff stepped from the defendant’s train while in motion, you are to determine the question of negligence on her part from all the evidence and c’reumstances in the case. If you believe from the evidence that the defendant’s train did not stop a reasonable time to allow her to get off, and started while she was in the act of alighting, and that she jumped from the steps of the car while the train was leaving the station and in motion, and under such circumstances that an ordinarily cautions, careful, and prudent person would not have apprehended danger therefrom, then you will find for the plaintiff; but if you find from the evidence that sufficient time was not allowed her to get off the car, and that she jumped from the steps of the car while the train was leaving the station and in motion, and under such circumstances that an ordinarily cautious, careful, and prudent person would *372have apprehended danger therefrom, then it was such an act of carelessness as would relieve the defendant from the responsibility otherwise resting upon it, and your verdict will be for the defendant.”

The legal principle enunciated in this instruction is attacked as not sound, appellant’s position being that the act of a passenger in jumping from a moving train is negligence per se, with the exception that by the act of the carrier the passenger has been placed between two dangers, or that some situation was created by the carrier which interfered with his free agency, and created in his mind a confidence that the attempt to leave the moving train could be made in safety. There is nothing in the record involving the question of the exercise of an immediate judgment upon the part of the respondent as to the choice of one of two impending dangers, and therefore we eliminate that element from the case. The remaining exception stated by appellant to the general rule upon which he relies is not made plain to us by counsel; neither do we find it recognized in the books. Appellant’s claims in this regard are drawn from the facts of certain cases where the passenger has been injured in alighting from a train at the suggestion of the brakeman or conductor. Such was the case of Filer v. New York C. R. R. Co., 49 N. Y. 47; 10 Am. Eep. 327; but that case and others, which as to the facts are found in company, do not recognize the rule of negligence per se, by reason of alighting from or boarding a moving train, and do not base their respective decisions upon an exception to such rule by reison of the advice or suggestion of one of the employees of the company. A passenger’s act in jumping from a moving train may be grossly negligent, and thereby release the carrier from all liability, notwithstanding it was done at the suggestion or upon the assurance of safety by the employee. The employee’s advice at the moment is in no sense conclusive upon the passenger as to his negligence or non-negligence in jumping from the train. Like every other circumstance surrounding the transaction, it casts some light upon the scene, and thereby aids the court according to the power and brilliancy of its light in each particular case to determine what a careful, prudent man would have done, placed in the position of the unfortunate *373passenger. This is all that is decided in the Filer case, and in no sense does the doctrine there declared form an exception to any general principle found in the law of negligence.

The earlier cases in many instances recognize the principle of negligence per se in alighting from a moving train, but modern authority to a great extent has supplanted that doctrine with broader views upon the question. In this case the court carefully and fairly stated to the jurors what in law would constitute “negligence” and “contributory negligence” upon the part of the respondent, and with that law in their possession remanded them to the jury-room to find the facts, and apply the law to the facts. Under the conditions surrounding respondent immediately prior to the injury, and to which we have already adverted, conceding the company’s claim that respondent jumped from a moving train, still we think the case without question justified the instructions of which complaint is now made. Ro trial court would be authorized to grant a non-suit upon the facts, and such being the case, the instruction was properly given.

Volume 2 of the American and English Eucyclopedia of Law, page 762, says: “ When a passenger, on having been set down or taken up at the station to or from which the railway has contracted to carry him, is injured in the attempt to board or leave a moving train, the railway is liable if the person injured in getting on or off the train did not incur a danger obviously apparent to the mind of a reasonable man.” In the Filer case the court supports the foregoing doctrine as follows: “That there was more hazard in leaving a car while in motion, although moving ever so slowly, than when it is at rest is self-evident; but whether it is imprudent and careless to make the attempt depends upon circumstances; and where a party by the wrongful act of another has been placed in circumstances calling for an election between leaving the ears or submitting to an inconvenience and a further wrong, it is a proper question for a jury, whether it was a prudent and ordinarily careful act, or whether it was a rash and reckless exposure of the person to peril and hazard.” In the well-considered case of Johnson v. Westchester & Philadelphia R. R. Co., 70 Pa. St. 357, the trial court indorsed the principle of negligence per se, and *374the supreme court said: “Instead, therefore, of the rule laid down by the learned judge, he should have left it to the jury to say, under all the circumstances in evidence, whether the danger of boarding the train when in motion was so apparent as to have made it the duty of the plaintiff to desist from the attempt.” To the same effect is the Louisville & National R. R. Co. v. Crunk, 119 Ind. 542; 12 Am. St. Rep. 443, where the party jumped from a train moving at the rate of four and a half miles per hour, and that was held not to be negligence per se. (See also Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Miles, 88 Ala. 256; Nichols v. Dubuque & Dakota R’y Co., 68 Iowa, 732; Pennsylvania Co. v. Marion, 123 Ind. 422; 18 Am. S±. Rep. 330.)

Among other cases relied upon to support appellant’s position is Jewell v. Chicago etc. R. R. Co., 54 Wis. 610; 41 Am. Rep. 63. That case is opposed to the views we have expressed and to the authorities we have cited. It does not state the better doctrine, and many of the decisions from other courts upon which it relies for support are not in line with it upon the facts.

We notice no other matters in the record demanding our attention.

For the foregoing reasons, let the judgment and order be affirmed.

Harrison, J., and Paterson, J., concurred.

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