47 So. 785 | Miss. | 1909
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
On the 10th clay of August, 1907, Samuel Johnson took passage on the Tazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad for the purpose of going from Merigold to Vicksburg. The train on which he embarked was a fast train, commonly called the “Cannon Ball,” and vestibuled throughout. The train was a night train, and due at Vicksburg about 12:40 a. m. It seems that after the train whistled for Vicksburg the porter passed through the car where Johnson was, carrying with him a box of some kind, which he placed on the platform, and himself returned inside. After this was done, Johnson got up and got a drink of wateq and decided to walk out on the platform, and when he did so his feet came in contact with the box which had been placed in the vestibule by the porter, and he was thrown out, sustaining very serious injuries. It seems that the box was not setting in the passageway leading from car to car, but had been set just outside in the passageway leading to the steps. When the porter went out to set .the box down, he not only did this, but for the purpose of subserving his own convenience he raised the trapdoor over the steps and opened the door of the vestibule leaving the vestibule in the nighttime in this unprotected condition, and without light or guard of any kind, and so it was at the time Johnson writ out on the platform. The porter testified that, when he vent out to open the vestibule and deposit the box in question, Johnson was standing out on the platform, and he told him to go inside the ear off the platform; but this is disputed by Johnson. In short, the proof shows that as the train approached Vicksburg this porter, to- subserve his own convenience, took this box, placed it in the passageway leading down the steps, opened the trapdoor over the steps, and threw open the vestibule door, so as to permit ingress and egress when the train should stop, returning immediately to the interior of the car, and Johnson, unconscious of the condition of the vestibule as left by the porter, walke'd out on the platform, stumbled on this box, fell off, plunged down the steps and through the vestibule
It cannot be declared as a matter of law that a passenger on a railway train is guilty of negligence per se merely because he rides on the platform of a moving train. Whether he is guilty of such contributory negligence as will defeat a recovery for any injury received while there must depend upon the facts of each particular case. In view of the many modern improvements for safety in railway cars, platforms, train appliances, etc., chief among which is the modem vestibule train, with its close couplings and housed passageways leading from car to car, standing as an invitation by the railway to greater freedom in the use of all parts of its cars by passengers, and making travel almost as safe on the platform as elsewhere, it is readily seen that the rules announced by the older decisions can have but little application, when the only negligence charged is that of riding on the platform of such a train. This is recognized in Hutchinson on Carriers (3d ed.), vol. 3, p. 1406, note 35, and authorities. The same authority says, on page 1407, that “in an action by the passenger, who has received an injury while riding upon the platform of a moving railway car, it would be essential to the defense of the company that the passenger’s imprudence in assuming such a position should have been the proximate cause of the injury.” In volume 29, p. 417, Cyc., it is said that: “Negligence is a relative term, and depends upon the circumstances of each particular case. What might be negligence under some circumstances, at some time or place, may not be negligence under other circumstances, at another time and place. All the surrounding or attendant circumstances must be taken into account, if the question involved is one of negligence, such as the opportunity for deliberation, degree of danger, and many other considerations or like nature, affecting the standard of
In the citations above will be found nearly all the authorities bearing upon this subject. We adopt the view of those authorities which hold that the question of negligence, on the facts presented by this record, is a question for the jury to determine.
Reversed and remanded.