109 Neb. 356 | Neb. | 1922
This was an action brought by plaintiff as administrator of the estate of Anna Pauline Jensen, deceased, to recover damages from the defendant Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway Company, on the charge that the defendant company had, through its negligence, caused the death of plaintiff’s intestate while, it is claimed, she sustained the relation to it of a passenger. The deceased sustained the injuries, of which she died, from a motorcycle, which passed the defendant’s street car and struck
There is testimony in behalf of the plaintiff to show the following facts: Anna Pauline Jensen, a young-woman, was a passenger on a street car operated by the defendant company. The car was proceeding south on Thirteenth street in the city of Omaha. A signal was given for the car to stop at a street intersection, a regular stopping place. Miss Jensen went forward to the front end of the car, stepped down into the front vestibule, and, as soon as the car stopped and the door opened, she stepped on down into the street. She was immediately followed by another passenger who stepped down close behind or beside -her and was in the street at the time of the accident. As Miss Jensen descended from the car, she took one long step out onto the pavement, and was just in the act of swinging her other foot forward, to take another step, when she was struck by a motorcycle which was just then passing close to the car at a great speed. The motorman of the street car did not see the motorcycle until after the accident had happened, though by looking in a small mirror, so arranged that he had a view of the outside of the car. and of the rear entrance, it may have been that, had he’looked for it, he could have seen the motorcycle as it approached. The conductor, however, stationed at the rear end of the car, had noticed the man on the motorcycle when he was some' two blocks distant 'behind the cax, and had remarked to the passengers near him that the man was approaching at a high speed. Different witnesses fixed the speed of the motorcyclist at from JO to 60 miles an hour,
Plaintiff contends that the street railway company was negligent in having failed to discover and to warn Miss Jensen of the approaching vehicle. The defendant, on the other hand, contends that it was not the duty of the street railway company to watch for such vehicles; that those were obvious dangers, at all times more or less present upon the street, and dangers which the passenger must, himself, take notice of. The defendant further urges that at the first moment Miss Jensen stood upon the pavement, after descending from the car, she ceased to be a passenger, and from that instant, whatever may have happened to her, the company can be held to no responsibility, growing out of any duty it owed her as a carrier.
A long list of cases is cited by the defendant to show that a person alighting from a street car ceases to be a passenger after he alights and moves away from the place of his landing. Chesley v. Waterloo, C. F. & N. R. Co., 188 Ia. 1004, 12 A. L. R. 1366; Hammett v. Birmingham R., L. & P. Co., 202 Ala. 520; Morris v. Omaha & C. B. Street R. Co., 193 Ia. 616; Creamer v. West End Street R. Co., 156 Mass. 320; Powers v. Connecticut Co., 82 Conn. 665; Conroy v. Boston Elevated R. Co., 188 Mass. 411; Haskins v. St. Louis & S. R. Co., 193 Ill. App. 437; Street R. Co. v. Boddy, 105 Tenn. 666; Smith v. City R. Co., 29 Or. 539.
Though in some of those cases it is stated as a rule that a person ceases to be a passenger the moment he alights upon the street, yet in no case cited was the person injured at that moment, nor immediately afterward, at the place where he had alighted. In each of the cases he had taken his way from that spot and was injured upon the street, after he had left the car and when, with
In some of those cases (Chesley v. Waterloo, C. F. & N. R. Co., Hammett v. Birmingham R., L. & P. Co, Creamer v. West End Street R. Co., Street R. Co. v. Boddy, and Smith v. City R. Co.), it is stated generally tnat a street railway company is not obliged to warn passengers, about to alight from the car, as to the danger they may encounter from passing vehicles. Obviously, however, in these particular decisions the danger from passing vehicles, against which it is said the company is not reqxxired to warn its passengers, was a danger which the passenger was to encounter after he had descended from the car and moved away, and at a time when the relation of carrier and passenger would unquestionably have been terminated. These decisions do hold that the company need not warn its passengers as to those dangers, which the passenger may encounter after the relation of carrier and passenger has terminated, yet. they do not directly pass upon the question of whether or not the company must keep a lookout and ®axm passengers of the danger from vehicles that he may encounter while in the act of alighting, or at the very spot where he shall alight upon the street, and before the relation of carrier and passenger has ceased. During that period, when a passenger is alighting from the car and until after he has ceased to be a passenger, the company owes him certain duties and obligations, to the end that it may furnish him a safe delivery at his destination. ’ Whether or not, in the performance of '•nose duties, it must warn and guard him against the
We are unable to agree with the contention that the company owed Miss Jensen no duty for the reason that, at the time of the accident, she was no longer a passenger.- We do not believe the rule is quite so strict as to hold that a person who has taken passage on a street car ceases to be a passenger at the moment, upon reaching his destination, that his feet touch the pavement in the act of alighting. It is a conceded rule that the company must exercise care in selecting the place- for the passenger to alight, since that is a part of the obligation of transportation which the street railway company has assumed. If there are defects or obstructions in the street, it must avoid them, if it reasonably can, and select landing places where the condition of the street is free from those dangers. If there are dangers in the condition of the street at the place of alighting, known to the company and not known to the passenger, it is its ffuty to warn the passenger as against those dangers. Where a passenger has alighted upon the street, the company still owes him protection at that place, as against the act of its employees or the movement of its car. Johnson v. Washington Water Power Co., 62 Wash. 619; Virginia Trust Co. v. Raymond, 120 Va. 674; Houston v. Lynchburg Traction & Light Co., 119 Va. 136. If such a person is, in any sense, a passenger at the place where he alights upon the street; if the company at that
The plaintiff relies upon the case of Wood v. North Carolina Public-Service Corp., 174 N. Car. 697, 1 A. L. R, 942. In that casé it was held that a passenger, who was struck by a passing vehicle immediately after he had alighted upon the street, did, at the time of the accident, retain his character as a passenger,' and ■ that the company owed him a duty of protection: Since the relation of carrier and passenger was found to exist, the court concluded that the company had owed him the duty of watching for and warning him against the danger from passing vehicles. We do not believe that that conclusion necessarily follows from the mere fact of the relation of carrier and passenger.
In the case of Loggins v. Southern Public Utilities Co., 181 N. Car. 221, the court carried the principle, established in the Wood case, one step farther, for in the Loggins case the person had alighted from the street car, and had stepped away from the place of alighting and was struck by a passing vehicle as he was making his way across the street to the curbing, at a time, we believe, when the relation of carrier and passenger had ceased to exist. The Loggins case is clearly in conflict, with the numerous decisions which we have above cited. In both of the decisions by the North Carolina iburt there were strong dissenting opinions.
Though Miss Jensen may have still retained her character as a passenger at the time she was struck by the motorcycle, it does not follow that the company was an insurer as to her safety. The company, it is true, is bound to exercise the utmost skill, diligence and foresight, consistent with the practical conduct of the business in which it is engaged, but it is not bound to do
The duty which the company owed her as a passenger Avhile she was upon the street was necessarily much more limited than the duty it owed her while she was in the car. As said in the lower court’s opinion in the case of Keator v. Scranton Traction Co., 191 Pa. St. 102, 105: “Of course, the defendant’s duty of protection was much less Avhile she Avas upon the street than while she was in the car. As long as she was upon the street, the defendant Avas not bound to protect her against assault or injury at the hands of other persons. It had no control over the highway, outside of its rails, nor any right to interfere with persons pursuing their avocations on the street, either upon foot or otherwise. Having no right of control it owed her no duty of protection against strangers; but upon what ground had the defendant
In the case of Farrington v. Boston Elevated R. Co., 202 Mass. 315, the company stopped its car at a place where there was a curbstone on the street at the place where the passenger was given an opportunity to alight. By reason of the irregularity in the surface of the street, the place was one of more or less difficulty as a place for landing passengers. However, the danger whs inherent in the street and one which was obvious to any person who looked. The court stated that, where a street is temporarily defective and a passenger alighting is apt to step on the defect, the street railway company may be held to reasonable care either by way of Avarning or otherwise, but Avhere there is nothing in the appearance of the passenger to indicate to the conductor that she has not ordinary capacity to care for herself, or that it would be more dangerous for her to alight than for other persons, the company has a right to assume that she knoAvs generally of the danger, and the court stated that any other rule would impose upon the defendant a burden at once unreasonable and practically impossible of performance.
In a somewhat similar case, Scanlon v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co., 208 Pa. St. 195, the surface of the street at the point where the passenger was allowed to alight was of an irregular character, requiring of the passenger a long step. The passenger alighting at this place was injured, and the court said (p. 197) : “The car was running upon the public highway, over which it must be remembered, the defendant company has no control. In laying its tracks, it must conform to the
We cannot say that a street railway company is, as i general rule, required to watch for and to warn its passengers, who are about to descend into the street, against those obvious dangers from moving vehicles which are incidental to and common on the street, and which are known to all. Such a warning would, in most instances, be utterly superfluous. A rule requiring the company to watch for and Avarn its passengers as to all such dangers would be impracticable and extremely burdensome. The danger from moving vehicles and from other independent agencies operating upon the street is an ever-present one,
In the case of Oddy v. West End Street R. Co., 178 Mass. 341, a passenger had signaled the conductor that she wished to alight at the next street intersection. The conductor, observing that fire engines were passing along
A case, Avhich comes nearer passing upon the question which we are considering here than any that has come to our attention, is the case of Ellis v. Hamilton Street R. W. Co., 48 Out. Law Rep. 380. In that case the car-had stopped, at the instance of the passenger, in the middle of the block, and not at the customary stopping place. The passenger, upon leaving the car, and at - a moment Avhen the court recognized that the relation of passenger and carrier still continued, was struck -by a passing vehicle. The court held that the company was not negligent in failing to warn the passenger of the danger of passing vehicles at the point where she was allowed to alight. The court said: “There is nothing in the evidence to shoAV that the motorman knew that the plaintiff did not know and appreciate, as much as he did, any risk she -was taking in asking that the car be
Though as a general rule we believe that a street railway company is not obliged to warn passengers against the dangers from passing traffic that they may encounter in alighting from the company’s cars, yet we do not say that that rule is inflexible and not subject to exceptions. Where the passenger is a child, or a person who does not possess full and normal faculties for protecting himself, which condition is known, or, in the exercise of due care, should have been known to the company’s employees, the company no doubt owes him a greater degree of care to protect him from danger at the place where he alights than it does the ordinary individual, and, it may be, in such a case, should be on the lookout to warn him of the dangers of passing vehicles. And in any case where there is a particular danger from a passing vehicle, which danger has become known to the company’s employee, and where it has become apparent to such employee that such danger is not known to the passenger about to alight, we take it, of course, to he the duty of the employee to
In this case the plaintiff’s intestate was a young woman, alert and apparently keenly alive to the conditions which surrounded her. We cannot say that there was any negligence on the part of the motorman, who was unaware of the approaching danger, and on whom we do not find that there was any affirmative duty to watch for such danger. The question, however, remains as to whether negligence can be predicated upon the action of the conductor on the car, who knew of the approaching vehicle, in failing to give warning. The conductor, it must be remembered, was at the far end of the car. He had seen the motorcyclist approaching at a high rate of speed, but he had a right to assume, until the contrary affirmatively appeared, that the motorcyclist, when he neared the car, would slacken his speed, and so far turn out toward the curb as to avoid hitting or endangering any passengers who might happen at the time to be in the act of descending from the street car. He also had a right to assume, where the contrary did not appear, that passengers on the car who were about to alight were also on the alert and watching for passing vehicles. His attention was directly concerned with the passengers immediately under his observation. It appears to us from a reading of the evidence that the conductor, after th? danger had become apparent to him, did not know that Miss Jensen was unaware of the danger, and, even had he then known it, that he would have had no time or opportunity to notify her, so as to have prevented her from meeting with the accident.
The record would justify holding the motorcyclist civilly, as well as criminally, but we are of opinion that the evidence in behalf of the plaintiff, as we have set it out above, was insufficient to support a finding of negligence on the part of the company and of a violation of an affirmative duty which it owed to the plaintiff’s in
The ruling of the trial court, therefore, directing a verdict in favor of the defendant, was, as we view it, correct, and the judgment should be
Affirmed.