137 Mo. App. 694 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
— Plaintiff suffered personal injury while riding as a passenger on one of defendant’s trains. She charged that the injury was occasioned by the negligence of defendant and brought this action for damages and recovered judgment in the trial court.
It appears that plaintiff was accompanied by her little boy, who became thirsty and she went to the lavatory where the water cooler was and brought a drink to him. In returning the glass she opened the' door of the lavatory, put the glass in its place, closed the door and to steady herself (the car was running rapidly
Does it show such state of facts, as applied to the law, as will afford a foundation for a charge of negligence on the part of the brakeman? The law is that the carrier must exercise the highest degree of care for the safety of the passenger. He is required to exercise more care for the passenger than- the passenger is required to exercise for himself, - for the latter is in the carrier’s keeping and is only called upon to exercise ordinary care.
Yet we do not think a case was made. The demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. There is no ground within the limits of reason and common sense to charge the brakeman with negligence. The plaintiff’s hand was in its position but for a moment. She says that as she came out of the door the “car lurched” and “I just merely paused enough to steady myself to turn.” “I just threw up my hand for a moment to steady myself like that, and a lady was very near me there, you know; she made some remark to me and I turned,” to go to her seat. She was asked “Didn’t you say you didn’t have your hand there but an instant till you got pinched?” She answered that she “only
Plaintiff insists she has a precedent for her claim that whether the brakeman was negligent was a question for the jury, in the case of Romine v. Railroad, 24 Ind. App. 230 (56 N. E. 245). That case was singularly like this in the occasion and nature of the injury; but it contains essential proof of negligence which this entirely lacks. There a passenger, an elderly man, was standing in the aisle at the rear car door, the upper half of which was glass, looking at the country. He had one hand resting upon the side of the lavatory, his little finger just over the division between the rear or hinge side of the door and the door facing. He had been standing in that position for some time when the conductor came up from the rear and, as was his custom in order to see if any one was inside, opened and closed the door of the lavatory quickly. As he opened it -the passenger’s little finger fell into the crack and was crushed by the closing.
Another case, that of Baker v. Railroad, 118 N. Y. 533, involved the crushing of a finger by the closing of a door. But that came about in a manner so different as to destroy its application here. It involved the sudden starting of a train and the sudden pitching forward of the passenger and the catching of her hand in a swinging door.
We feel bound to reverse the judgment and it is so ordered.