Denver & Berkeley Park Rapid Transit Co. v. Dwyer

20 Colo. 132 | Colo. | 1894

Chiee Justice Hayt

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is contended by appellant that under the allegations of the complaint the breach of duty charged consisted in the defendant company negligently carrying plaintiff past his destination, and that for .this breach at best only nominal damages are warranted.

This argument is manifestly unsound. The injuries for which damages are claimed are alleged to have been caused by crushing plaintiff “ between the steps of said motor engine and said bank. * * * ” The allegation with reference to carrying plaintiff beyond his destination is inserted as one of the steps leading up to these injuries. The authorities *136cited and quoted as to the measure of damages for carrying a passenger beyond his destination have no application in this case. Where passengers are prevented from debarking at their destination and thereafter injured by the negligence of the carrier, it has certainly never been held that the right of •recovery was in such cases limited to the rule of damages governing where recovery is sought only for carrying the passenger beyond his place of destination without affording . him an opportunity to debark.

It is said that plaintiff was at most a mere trespasser upon the defendant’s train, and that for this reason a recovery is unwarranted. It is unnecessary to determine the duty owing by a common carrier to a mere trespasser upon its trains, for the reason that plaintiff did not occupy*- that position to the defendant. He was in the defendant’s employ' at the time and it is undisputed that it was the defendant’s custom to furnish transportation to such employees to and from their work, and that upon this occasion the hand car being out of order, the foreman substituted transportation- by the train. Although no fare was collected or expected from the plaintiff the evidence shows that he was lawfully upon the train. Rosenbaum v. St. Paul & Duluth R. R. Co., 38 Minn. 173.

Plaintiff’s conduct in taking a seat upon the motor is not to be measured by* the rules applicable to an ordinary railroad train. The latter are much more dangerous; theyr usually run at a high rate of speed and are not so readily under control. As a rule they Stop at regular stations only, with comparatively long distances intervening, while street cars run at a less rate of speed, are readily under control and stop at each block upon signal. The roadbeds of street car lines are usually smooth and easy of access, while the car steps are near the ground and the opportunity for exit more favorable. This difference is understood and acted upon by the' traveling public. Acts, therefore, which would be held as gross negligence on the part of a passenger in the case of an ordinary railroad train might not be so construed in the case of a street car.

*137The evidence shows that the platform upon which plañir tiff rode resembled the front platform of a street car, and in view of the crowded condition of the cars and the instructions of the foreman, we think the question of contributory-negligence was one proper for the consideration of the jury. In this connection, the evidence tending to show that the switch was a regular stopping place for defendant’s trains, was competent as showing that plaintiff had a right to expect that he would have an opportunity to leave the train at this jioint, particularly if he signaled for this purpose, as he did.

Dwyer, over appellant’s objection, testified as follows:

“ When I was going in the gate (at Elitch’s Gardens) I heard the foreman say, ‘ Don’t get in so as to bother the passengers.’ I came out of the gardens, * * * saw that the train was full, and I jumped on the engine. I looked inside at the front end and .saw two or three men in there. I said to the engineer, ‘I guess this is as comfortable a seat as I can get.’ He said, ‘ It is about as comfortable a seat as any; it is hot inside.’ I sat down and got my pipe out and went to smoking, and we' were talking back and forth on the way in. I sat on the platform and put m}r feet on that step. My legs were beyond the side of the platform their width. Rode that way till we came to the automatic switch on Gallup avenue.”

We deem this evidence all competent and admissible under the issues. It was by the foreman’s direction that plaintiff got upon the car and we see no valid reason for rejecting what was said by the foreman at the time. It was certainly competent for the purpose of showing that plaintiff was law-. fully upon the train. So, also, the conversation with the engineer was pertinent as showing that he was aware of the position on the motor occupied by the plaintiff, as the question of the defendant’s negligence must be determined in the light of this knowledge on the part of the engineer. This question was called to the attention of the jury by the court in a number of instructions. The rule announced is in substance as follows: Although the plaintiff may have been *138guilty of contributory negligence, this would not prevent a recovery. If the defendant with knowledge of his exposed condition, by the exercise of ordinary care might have prevented, the injury, it was its duty to do so, and failing in this the plaintiff could recover.

The above qualification of the general rule of negligence is supported by the best of authority in England and also in this country, and is particularly applicable to the facts in this case. Kansas Pacific Ry. Co. v. Cranmer, 4 Colo. 524; The Denver & Berkeley Park Rapid Transit Co. v. Dwyer, 3 Colo. Appeals, 408; I. & S. Coasting Co. v. Tolson, 139 U. S. 551.

In the case cited last the action was by a wharfinger against a steamboat company for crushing his foot between the timbers of a wharf by the violent striking of a steamboat against the wharf. There was conflicting evidence as to the negligence of the defendant and the contributory negligence of plaintiff. The supreme court in th’e course of its opinion sustaining a recovery, said, at page 559:

“ The jury might well be of opinion that while there was some negligence on his (plaintiff’s).part in standing where and as he did, jTet that the officers of the boat knew just where and how he stood, and might have avoided injuring him if they had used reasonable care to prevent the steamboat from striking the wharf with unusual and unnecessary violence. If such were the facts, the defendant’s negligence was the proximate, direct and efficient cause of the injury.”

We have considered this action without reference to the •fact that plaintiff arose to a standing position just before the accident, for the reason that, it is conceded, the change from a sitting to a standing position, did not further expose the" plaintiff to danger or in any way contribute to the accident.

It is claimed that plaintiff might have saved himself by stepping up on the platform. Perhaps he could have done so, but plaintiff had little, if any, time to make a choice. When asked why he did not step up on to the platform he said:

“ It was my first thought to get off, and when the second *139thought came I called to the engineer, and at the third my foot was caught. It Avas all so quickly done that I could not do■ that.” A party suddenly realizing that he is in danger from the negligence of another is not to be charged Avith contributory negligence for every error of judgment Avhen practically instantaneous action is required. This question was faiily submitted to the jury by the instructions and decided in favor of plaintiff, and certainly we cannot say as a matter of law .upon this review that it was not correctly determined. Stokes v. Saltonstall, 13 Peters, 181; Union Pacific Ry. Co. v. Kelley, 4 Colo. Appeals, 325; Silver Cord C. M. Co. v. McDonald, 14 Colo. 191.

Perceiving no error in the record' the judgment will be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Mr. Justice Goddard did not sit in this case.