delivered the opinion of the court:
Dеfendant in error brought an action in tort against plaintiffs in error, the Chicago City Railway Company and the Chicago Railways Company, in the circuit court of Cook county, to recover damages for injuries alleged to havе been received on June 25, 1916, by reason of a fall which she received while attempting to.board a street car at the intersection of Paulina and West Madison streets, in the city of Chicago. The declaration cоnsists of two counts. The first count, after alleging the ownership and operation of the street car, alleges that while the street car had stopped at the intersection of said streets for the reception of рassengers, and while plaintiff was endeavoring to board the car as a passenger, using ordinary care for her own safety, the defendants, by their employees, negligently caused the street car to be suddenly and violently started, and thereby she was thrown to the street and injured. The second count is similar to the first, except that it charges that while the car was stopped and the plaintiff was in the act of boarding the car, using ordinary care for hеr own safety, the defendants failed to afford her a reasonable opportunity, and by reason of their negligence in the operation of the car the plaintiff was thrown to the street and injured. The plaintiffs in error filed a plea of "general issue. The case was tried before a jury, which returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $2000. An appeal was prayed to the Appellate Court, where the judgment was affirmed, and the cause comes here on writ of certiorari.
Plaintiffs in error assign as error the. giving and refusal of certain instructions by the trial court. They contend that there was a sharp conflict in- the evidence and that it- was important and necessary that the instructions to the jury be free from error.
The plaintiff’s evidence showed that she, a woman of about the age of fifty years, on the evening of the accident had attended church, and on her return homeward, about 10:30 P. M., she ,stoрped at Paulina and West Madison streets for the purpose of taking a north-bound street car; that when she reached the intersection she crossed first to the southwest corner, and seeing a north-bound car she proceeded to cross Paulina street, on which street the car was being operated, in order to board the same. In doing so she passed to thfc rear of the north-bound car. Her evidence tends to establish that she pаssed around the rear of the car to the east side of the rear platform and to the center of the entrance, where she waited for five people who were in front of her to get on; that four of them boаrded the car and the fifth stepped to the right and assisted her onto the step; that she took hold of the right-hand bar with her right hand and placed her right foot on the step and her left foot on the platform, and that as she was in the аct of pulling herself into the car it started with a jerk, throwing her onto the street. There is other testimony tending to corroborate her. Defendants’ theory is that the car remained standing until everyone who was waiting had boarded the car; that the conductor looked out and saw that no one else was attempting to get on the step-, whereupon he signaled and the car started slowly and smoothly; that the plaintiff was still coming around the rear of the car and had not gotten around to the step when the car started to move away, and she hastened and reached for the rear hand-bar, and that when she got hold of it she fell.
The defendant in error in support of her testimony called a man and his nine-year-old daughter, who were alighting from the front platform. The testimony of these witnesses tended to corroborate the theory of the defendant in error. Plaintiffs in error offered the testimony of six witnesses, two of whom were standing on the curb near the platform and four of whom were on the rear platform. The testimony of these witnesses tended to corroborate the theory of the plaintiffs in error. Without reviewing in detail the evidence in the case, it is sufficient to say that the evidence was in sharp conflict as to how the injury occurred and as to whether or not the defendant in error was in the act of boarding the car at the time the same started. It is necessary in such condition of the record that the instructions to the jury be free from error. Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. v. Donworth,
The first count of the declaratiоn charged that the defendant in error was a passenger on the car when the same was negligently started up by plaintiffs in error. If defendant in error was in the act of boarding the car when it was started up it cannot be doubted that she was a passenger. (Klinck v. Chicago City Railway Co.
Defendant in error, in support of her contention that the giving of the above instruction was not error, cites Hatcher v. Quincy Horse Railway Co.
The case of Klinck v. Chicago City Railway Co. supra, lays down the rule that while it is necessary to prove either an express or implied contract of carriage between the carrier and the alleged passenger, yet the act of the carrier in stopping its street car, or in bringing it almost to a stop, at a plаce where it is accustomed to receiye and discharge passengers, is an implied invitation to persons intending to take passage thereon at that place to board the car, and the act of any such person in boarding the car is an acceptance of such implied invitation and creates the relation of carrier and passenger. In that case it was held that as plaintiff was injured while in the act of boarding the car, he was a passenger. That case is to be distinguished from the case at bar in that there was no question in that case, as there is here, as'to whether or not the plaintiff was in the act of boarding the car when it was started.
In Chicago Union Traction Co. v. O’Brien,
Plaintiffs in error complain of the giving and" refusаl of other instructions. On examination of them, however, we are not of the opinion that the action of the court regarding them was such as to constitute reversible error.
For the error in giving the instruction referred to, the judgments of the Appellate and circuit courts will be reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
