241 Mass. 127 | Mass. | 1922
These are two actions of tort. In one, Jane Kinnarney, hereinafter called the plaintiff, sues for personal injuries received by her while alighting from a car of the defendant. Andrew J. Kinnarney, her husband, brings the second action to recover consequential damages caused by her injuries.
On June 13, 1915, the plaintiff, who was a passenger in an open car of the defendant, requested the conductor to stop at a crossing over a railroad track for the purpose of permitting her to alight, and the car came to a stop at the designated place. On direct examination, the plaintiff’s story of her accident was as follows: “When the car came to the stop I started to get off the car and put my right foot on to the step and went to step down and the distance was so great that my foot didn’t reach it and I went in under and fell right in under on this side (indicating). Q. ‘How high would you say the running board of the car was from the ground? ’ ... A. ‘Well, I don’t know, I should say pretty near two feet, I couldn’t tell, I know I couldn’t reach the street, or any foundation, and I can step quite a distance, but I couldn’t reach it.’ — Q. ‘What can you tell the jury in reference to light or darkness at that time?’ A. ‘It was dusk, quite dark at the time.’” Upon cross-examination she testified that the night was bright; that she had travelled on the defendant’s railway “maybe four or five times a year; ” and that she was familiar with its cars.
The car was “ a double truck, fifteen-bench, open car, . . . and had been owned by the defendant . . . for thirteen years.” It had stationary running boards, the distance from the floor of the car to the running board being seventeen and one half inches, and twenty inches from the running board to the top of the rail. There was uncontradicted evidence that at the place of the accident “owing to the fact that there was a slight rise in the highway from the rail toward the middle of the street, the distance from the running board to the highway at the point of the accident was eighteen inches.” The defendant’s superintendent, called in behalf of the plaintiff, testified that from an operating and practical
The bill of exceptions does not state that it contains all the evidence material to the questions involved, but both parties have argued the case on that assumption and it is so considered.
It is assumed that the special finding of the jury that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care ought to stand.
The plaintiff’s contention of negligence is wholly founded on the failure, as she claims, of the defendant to provide a car with a running board placed at a reasonable distance from the ground.
Negligence in a case like this is not inferable from the accident. Carney v. Boston Elevated Railway, 212 Mass. 179. Perkins v. Bay State Street Railway, 223 Mass. 235. Gatchell v. Boston Elevated Railway, 238 Mass. 185.
Apart from the testimony given by an expert, there was no evidence upon which a finding of negligence could be made in the manner in which the car had been constructed, maintained or used. While this witness testified that the running board could have been lowered, he did not indicate how much lower it could have been made with safety on the car from which the plaintiff alighted, or indeed upon any car of that type. He testified that he had in 1915, under his supervision as foreman in the employ of the Boston Elevated Railway Company, no car where the running board measured over seventeen inches above the track; but it did not appear that the running board of the car in which the plaintiff was a passenger could have been lowered to that extent, or that if so lowered the car could have been used safely.
So ordered.