38 A.2d 282 | Conn. | 1944
The plaintiff brought this action to recover for injuries she suffered when, after dark on December 6, 1940, in New Haven, she slipped on an icy place in the street and fell as she was proceeding from the sidewalk to the front door of a waiting trolley car of the defendant to board it. From a judgment in the defendant's favor she has appealed. The plaintiff had been waiting beside a pole painted white to indicate a trolley stop. As the car approached, she signalled it. The motorman could have stopped the car at the pole, but, for some reason which does not appear, it ran about twenty feet beyond. He opened the door *154 and waited for the plaintiff. She proceeded along the sidewalk from the pole until she was opposite the door of the car. She then started to cross the street to it and some three to five feet before reaching it slipped and fell. That day, and on the night before, there had been a snowfall, the streets were generally covered with ice and snow and walking was somewhat precarious. This was so in the street in front of the pole where the plaintiff was waiting, but at that point the street was in a safer and better condition than at the place where the car stopped. However, even there the street was not so dangerously slippery that walking over it would necessarily or in reasonable probability involve the risk of a fall. The plaintiff knew of the conditions in the street; the place was well lighted; and she had no difficulty in seeing where she was going.
The essential conclusions of the trial court necessary for consideration are that the motorman was not negligent, particularly as regards his failure to stop the car exactly at the white pole, and that he was under no duty to warn the plaintiff of the condition of the street due to the ice and snow upon it. The court held that when the plaintiff fell she had not become a passenger of the defendant. It is this conclusion which the plaintiff particularly attacks, assuming, with reason, that it entered essentially into the determination that the motorman was not negligent. The ruling of the trial court was in accord with our decisions on facts which do not materially differ from those now before us. Donovan v. Hartford Street Ry. Co.,
There is no absolute duty upon a trolley company to stop its cars exactly at an indicated stopping point. St. John v. Connecticut Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.