Plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s street cars and slipped or fell on the steps of the car as he was leaving it. This action was for damages for personal injuries sustained by the fall. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $2,000,
The only issue of negligence developed at the trial related to whether defendant failed to have the car and the steps properly lighted. The accident occurred at night and plaintiff testified that as he started down the steps it was “a little darker than usual”; that he took one step and fell; that as he lay on his back he then observed that there was no light over the door; that he inquired about the lights and the motorman said they were “out of order.” A witness for plaintiff testified that there were no lights on the right side of the car and no light over the door. Another witness for plaintiff testified that according to his recollection there were no lights on the right side of the car and no light over the door.
Plaintiff’s evidence, we think, made out a case for the jury. Defendant, a common carrier, was under the duty of keeping the car and the means of egress properly lighted. The high degree of care owed by a common carrier to its passengers extends to them when boarding and alighting. Washington & O. D. R. Co. v. Slyder,
Defendant relies heavily on Brown v. Capital Transit Co.,
Defendant also contends there was no evidence that faulty lighting, if such existed, was the proximate cause of the injury, since plaintiff did not ascribe his fall to improper lighting or give any reason why he fell. However, if the jury found improper lighting it could also find that such was the proximate cause of the fall. Doctors Hospital, Inc. v. Badgley,
Having concluded that defendant’s motion for judgment ought not to have been, granted, we come to the question of the, form of order to be entered by this epurt.. After verdict below defendant under .rule., 46 of the trial court, patterned after Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule' 50, 28 U.S.C.A., moved for a new trial ‘ór .for judgment, notwithstanding the verdict. When-the court granted the-motion for judgment it denied the motion for new trial. Whether the motion for new trial was denied after due consideration or was denied automatically because of the granting of the motion for judgment does not -appear.
The proper procedure by a trial court with respect to an alternative motion for a new trial, when it grants a motion for judgment, has been the subject of some confusion in the federal courts. See Pessagno v. Euclid Inv. Co., Inc.,
The Supreme Court’s ruling did not entirely eliminate all confusion on the subject. See Allegheny County v. Maryland Casualty Co., 3 Cir.,
Judgment reversed with instructions to reinstate ’the verdict of the jury and to reinstate and consider the motion for new trial.
Notes
See also Advisory Committee’s recommended but unadopted amendment to F.R.C.P. 60,
For example see procedure followed by Judge Chesnut in Bopst v. Columbia Casualty Co., D.C.Md.,
Cf. General American Life Ins. Co. v. Central National Bank, 6 Cir.,
