114 Cal. 28 | Cal. | 1896
The plaintiff was injured in attempting to board a car of the defendant at the corner of San Bruno road and Army street, in San Francisco, and brought this action to recover damages therefor, alleging that the injury was caused through the negligence of the defendant “in failing to bring said car to a full and sufficient stop at the time plaintiff was boarding
It cannot be said as a proposition of law that the act of attempting to board a street-car while it is in motion is of itself negligence. Whether such act is negligent must depend upon the particular circumstances under which it is done. It is a matter of common observation that persons do every day get on and off from streetcars while they are in motion, under circumstances that would not, in the estimation of any reasonable man,
Neither could the court say as matter of law whether the defendant was guilty of negligence by reason of not bringing the car to a full stop before the plaintiff attempted to board it. The same considerations by which the attempt of the plaintiff to get upon the car while it was in motion is held not to be in itself negligent show that the failure of the defendant to stop the car was not in' itself an act of negligence. This is clearly indicated by the daily custom of drivers upon street-cars to merely slacken the speed of their cars in order to take on passengers, without any injury resulting therefrom. Especially would the driver be freed from the charge of negligence in not stopping the car if the passenger, without indicating any desire that the car should stop, should attempt to board it while it is in motion. (Moylan v. Second Avenue R. R. Co., 128 N. Y. 583.) There was no evidence that the defendant was negligent in the running of its car after the plaintiff made this attempt, or that the injury to the plaintiff was caused by any change in the speed of the car. On the contrary, it was shown that before the plaintiff got upon the platform the car came to a full stop.
It is alleged in the complaint that there was an ordinance of the city requiring railroad companies operating street-cars to have guards upon their cars by which persons may be protected from getting under the wheels of the car, and it was shown at the trial that the car in question had no protecting guards, as required by the ordinance. Whether the defendant was negligent in not having guards upon the car, as well as whether the absence of guards was the cause of injury to the plaintiff, was to be determined upon a consideration of all the facts connected with the injury, and the inferences that might be drawn therefrom. The court could not deter
The judgment and order are reversed.
Van Fleet, J., and Gakoutte, J., concurred.