74 Minn. 363 | Minn. | 1898
Mansfield is a stopping place on the railroad of the defendant, and was used mainly as the point at which to deliver supplies for a logging camp in the woods, and had but few inhabitants. A passenger train known as the “Limited” ran through the place every day, at a high rate of speed, without stopping.
Plaintiff was employed in receiving supplies and sending them to the camp, and on the day in question was standing on the platform when the train passed by. A bundle of pamphlets and periodicals, weighing about 14 pounds, thrown out of the baggage- car, struck him on the leg, broke it, and otherwise injured him. This action was brought to recover damages for the injury.
On the trial the court ordered a verdict for defendant, and from an order denying a new trial the plaintiff appeals.
The package was thrown off by one Cole, 'a news agent on the train. He received the package from one Bergen at Princeton, another station on the road, and was requested by Bergen to take the package to Mansfield and deliver it there. Taking the package to Mansfield, and delivering it there, was wholly outside of the line of the business of Cole as news agent, and seems to have been done to save the express or freight charge.
By the terms of the contract between defendant and Cole, he
But there was some evidence tending to prove that it had been the practice for years to throw bundles off the moving trains at this point; and appellant contends that the jury were warranted, on this evidence, in finding that defendant knew of this practice, and was negligent in failing to stop it. Defendant was not negligent in failing to stop it, unless the practice was dangerous in itself, or' the persons engaged in it were careless.
The practice of throwing heavy bundles off a moving train onto a platform where people congregate in any considerable numbers is dangerous, and the railroad company may be negligent in permitting such a practice. Galloway v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 56 Minn. 346, 57 N. W. 1058. But the evidence does not show that people were often on this platform when the train passed. The evidence fails to disclose that more than one or two people were usually in or about Mansfield when the limited passed through the place.
Again, most of the packages thrown off the train were bundles of daily newspapers, containing from one to six newspapers in a bundle, which would not be likely to do much injury by striking a person. In a few instances during the five or six years before the injury, heavier bundles were thrown off. This evidence would not warrant the jury in finding that the alleged practice was dangerous. This is the only question raised having any merit, and the order appealed from is affirmed.