216 Mass. 560 | Mass. | 1914
These are two actions of tort. The first is under St. 1906, c. 463, Part I, § 63, to recover for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, and the second at common law for conscious suffering.
On December 19, 1906, at about 8.30 A. M., the plaintiff’s intestate, a man sixty or sixty-two years of age, was a passenger on one of the defendant’s inbound surface cars which was ascending this west loop incline. When the front end of the car had reached a point almost at the end of the elevated station platform at the top of the incline, either this or some car ahead of it blew a fuse, and this car came to a stop. The intestate, who was riding on the rear platform, alighted from the car on the incline and started to walk to the station platform; and in some way he fell or was pushed over the wall, at a point nine feet from the ground below, and received injuries from which he died two days later. The evidence was conflicting as to whether he fell over the wall while suffering temporarily from some sickness, or was pushed over by a young man who had been a passenger on some car on the incline, and was hurrying to reach the elevated station platform.
The plaintiff contends that the intestate’s injuries and death were caused by the negligence of the defendant in failing to main
It appears that cars were frequently stalled on the incline, and that before the date of this accident passengers occasionally had alighted and walked up the incline to the platform. There was nothing to indicate that the steps at the end of the platform or the incline were intended for the use of passengers. The plain indications were such as to make it apparent that passengers were not to use the incline for travel on foot, and if the decedent saw fit to leave a place of safety on the car in order to save time, or for any other purpose, he ceased to be a passenger, and, as was said in Legge v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 197 Mass. 88, 90: "Nor does it make any difference that he goes where others, with the knowledge of the railroad company, have gone before him, unless there is some invitation express or implied upon the part of the company. Knowledge of such use, where proper arrangements have been otherwise provided does not of itself amount to such invitation.”
There is no evidence to show that there was either an express or implied invitation to the decedent to leave the car upon the incline and undertake to reach the station by walking up to the platform. We are of opinion that when he alighted from the car upon the incline he ceased to be a passenger, and was there either without right, or at the most as a bare licensee.
This case is readily distinguishable from many others where it
The conclusion which we have reached on this branch of the case renders it unnecessary,to consider whether there was any evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant in failing to maintain a barrier or railing to prevent passengers from falling over the wall.
Exceptions overruled.