155 P. 339 | Utah | 1916
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages impersonal injuries which she alleged she sustained through the defendant’s negligence while a passenger on one of its trains. She, in substance, alleges in her complaint that the defendant, was negligent in the following particulars: (1) That, owing-to the large number of persons who were about to enter the cars of the defendant at the time and place the accident occurred, defendant was negligent “in failing to provide servants for the proper direction and management of said persons,” etc., (2) for failure to “provide its passengers then and there being with sufficient transportation accommodation, facilities, and equipment,” etc., (3) for failure to “provide any reasonable means for passage from one of its said cars to the other”; and that it did “negligently construct, maintain, and operate its said cars so as to leave an open space between the ends of the platforms thei’eof of about seventeen inches distant in width, and so as to leave said platforms inadequately and insufficiently lighted and illuminated.” The-plaintiff further alleged that in entering upon defendant’s, train, consisting of four ears; at about eleven o’clock at night at Lagoon station, and while said train was standing still for the purpose of receiving passengers, she passed up the steps, of one car, and, on reaching the platform thereof, noticed that the seats in said car were all occupied by passengers, and, in order'to obtain a seat, she, in attempting to pass through the "opening or doorway at the end of the vestibule of the car she was on to the vestibule of the adjoining car, stepped into the space between the two cars existing as aforesaid, and fell, by reason of which fall she sustained severe bodily
“No, I didn’t get a seat. I was on the platform, and the platform was pretty well crowded, and I asked Mrs. Stevens to step aside to allow me to pass, so she tried to move aside, ánd I went to go from one car to the other, and that is the last I remember. I fell and don’t know anything more about it. I became unconscious and remained so from Thursday until Saturday evening. ’ ’
On cross-examination she further testified:
“The platform was crowded. I just stepped up and then turned. Mrs. Stevens was standing there, and I asked her to step aside and allow me to pass from one car to the other. That would be the one south of the one I was on. I don’t know, but I suppose I just took one step and supposed it was all inclosed like an ordinary train. Q. And you just started to walk right through, looking over into the other car? A. Yes, sir. Q. You were looking into the other car to see if you could get a seat while you were walking through? A. To see if there was any chance. Both platforms were crowded. Q. When you started to walk between these cars, you were looking right ahead of you, into the car? A. There was no way of looking down; there was too much of a crowd there Q. Was there a crowd between the cars? A. Standing just like they were as crowded as they could be. Q. Was there a crowd of people standing between the two cars? A. I suppose there was. Q. You suppose there was. Well, was there? A. Well, no. How could they be between? Q. That is what I am asking you. There were no people between the cars? A. No. Q. So that the crowd of people didn’t prevent you from looking down between the cars?. A. It wasn’t
Mrs. Stevens, who was a- witness for the plaintiff, testified:
‘ ‘ The platform was packed. In the car it 'was packed all through. I was backed right up against the brake, and, when Mrs. Conway asked me, I was talking to her, and then I turned to my husband, and the next I remember is her speaking to me and asking me if I would move so that she could pass through to the car' on the south. The next I remember is turning and seeing her step right into the ehain. There was a chain that linked the ears together, and her foot caught right in there, and she fell toward the west, and her head struck the ground, or'the track; I don’t know whieh. I ■could not say what the space was between the cars, but I think it was the ordinary space, somewhere about a foot, I should judge.”
Apart from the evidence that there was much crowding in getting onto the cars and on the platforms thereof, and the evidence respecting plaintiff’s injuries, the foregoing is practically all the evidence in respect of how the plaintiff was injured and the condition of the platforms of the ears, and ■the lighting thereof.
'• Upon substantially the foregoing evidence; the defendant moved for a nonsuit upon two' grounds: (1) That the plaintiff had failed to establish any negligence on the part of the defendant; and (2) that-the evidence “affirmatively shows that the direct cause of the accident is due to the negligence ■of the plaintiff herself.” The motion was denied,- and the defendant then produced evidence to the effect that its cars were of the standard type and make used by interurban and city railways; that it was impractical to build platforms on cars used for city and interurban travel which would come in close contact like those on standard Pullman cars used on ordinary steam railways; that-the reason why such-platforms were not in general use and could not be successfully operated ■on city- and interurban railways was on account of the short
The defendant’s evidence was not controverted. After all of the evidence was in, the defendant moved the court for a directed verdict in its favor, which motion the court denied and submitted the case to the jury upon the evidence and instructions, some of which were excepted to by the defendant and which will be noticed hereinafter. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which the court entered judgment, from which the defendant appeals.
Among other instructions, the court gave the following:
The defendant excepted to that portion of the instruction we have copied, and now insists that the giving thereof constituted prejudicial error.
It will be observed that the,.court charged the jury that, if they found that there was “an open space between the vestibule platforms of said cars,” such fact, standing alone, was sufficient to “constitute prima facie evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant.” In other words, the charge was to the effect that the plaintiff had made out a prima facie case if she proved that there was any space between the vestibule platforms of the cars from one of which she was in the act of passing to the other when she fell. The question of whether to permit such space to exist between cars operated on elevated street railways constituted negligence has been passed on by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in the following cases: Welch v. Boston El. Ry. Co., 187 Mass. 118, 72 N. E. 500; Falkins v. Boston El. Ry. Co., 188 Mass. 153, 74 N. E. 338; Hawes v. Boston El. Ry. Co., 192 Mass. 324, 78 N. E. 480. In the Falkins Case the space between "the platforms of the-cars was shown to be seven and one-half inches. The gist of the decision is reflected in the headnote, which reads as follows:
“It was not negligence for an elevated railroad company to permit -an open space in the passageway between the platforms of its cars, made necessary by sharp curves in its line, and to impliedly invite passengers to use such passageway at stations in going between the cars without informing them in words of the existence of such open space.”
In Hawes v. Boston El. Ry. Co., supra, the evidence showed that the space between the platforms was seven inches at the nearest point, and eleven inches at the widest point, and the court held that merely to show that there was such a space was not evidence of negligence. In thé course of the opinion, the court says:
“We see no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. There is nothing.to show that the space between the cars could have 2>een made any less, or that the ends of the platform could have*516 been made any different. The defendant was not bound to warn the plaintiff of the space between the cars, or to assist her in crossing from one to the other.”
The foregoing cases are referred to in 1 Nellis on Street Railways (2d Ed.), Section 290, and no other cases are by the author referred to contrary to the rule laid down by the-Massachusetts court.
In Furgason v. Citizens’ St. Ry. Co., 16 Ind. App. 171, 44 N. E. 936, it is held that the cpmpany is not liable for injuries, resulting to one passenger from the crowding or pushing of other passengers. Rothchild v. Central Ry. Co., 163 Pa. 49, 29 Atl. 702, is in principle the same as the cases cited from Massachusetts. While plaintiff’s counsel, in their brief, question the soundness of the eases from Massachusetts, yet they have failed to refer to any ease which holds to the contrary, and, after a somewhat extended search, we have not been able to find any. We cannot see how it can be said that the mere fact that there is an open space to the extent shown by the evidence between the platforms of two connecting cars, constitutes negligence.
Instruction No. 4 is also complained of. That instruction is subject to criticism only because it confirms other instrue-
What-has been said also-covers defendant’s assignments respecting the court’s refusal to charge the jury as requested by it.
- For the reasons hereinbefore stated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the District Court of •Weber County, with directions to grant a new trial. Appellant to .recover costs.
Concurrence Opinion
-. I concur.- Under, the evidence I think the question of the ■negligence was wholly one of fact, which to establish, the plaintiff, had the burden, and that where the court told the jury certain things constituted a prima facie case of negligence he. invaded the province of-the jury.