81 Pa. Super. 504 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Submitted March 16, 1923. This is an action in trespass brought by Nellie Murphy in her own right and George W. Murphy, as her husband. She was a passenger on a street car having boarded the car about 4 o'clock in the afternoon of December 23, 1918. She claims that the car was so crowded that she could not get into the car and was compelled to stand upon the rear platform, next to the brake crank and motor box. There were four or five other persons on the platform when she entered the car and this number was increased from time to time as the car stopped and took on more passengers. The vestibule of the car was crowded to such an extent that the clothing of the last person entering before the accident, was caught in the door. As the car proceeded it struck with unabated speed a curve and the lurch of the car was so violent that the other passengers riding on the platform were pushed *506 against the plaintiff so that she came in violent contact with the brake crank and was injured. The jury found in favor of the plaintiffs, and the court allowed the verdict to stand.
The first and third assignments of error are directed to the refusal of the defendant's first and third points. The first was "It is incumbent on the part of the plaintiff to show by the weight of the evidence that she exercised an increase of care and vigilance, in other words that she exercised more than ordinary care, owing to her standing on the platform. In the absence of such evidence, the plaintiff cannot recover." This was answered by "The burden is upon defendant to show contributory negligence, and point is denied." The third, "An individual standing in an electric car when in motion must take more than ordinary precaution against being jolted by the movement of the car or by the passengers standing next to him, and there being no evidence of any such precaution in this case there can be no recovery." This was denied. We do not think that the court could fix a standard of care that a passenger who considering the surrounding circumstances was rightfully upon a platform, should exercise. Where a passenger stands upon the step of the car and there is a hand railing, it would be reasonable to say that such a passenger should grasp the rail. Obviously there is some difference between one riding in a closed vestibule, and one on an open platform. In this case the court could not declare that there was anything for the defendant to do upon the platform in a crowd of men except to stand and observe ordinary care. The only increased hazard that came to the plaintiff in the closed vestibule was the difference between her being in a standing position instead of a sitting position and the former was of necessity the only attitude she could assume. The affirmance of these two points would have required the court to have told the jury that as she did not show that she exercised more than ordinary care against being jolted by the movement of the car or by *507 passengers standing next to her, there could be no recovery. In effect these points were requests for binding instructions and were properly refused.
The second assignment is directed to the refusal of the second point. It was: "The plaintiff could not recover because the evidence in the case did not show that the speed was excessive or that more electric power was employed than was necessary. In Panek v. Scranton Railway Company,
The appellant raises the point that the plaintiff when she found that the car which she intended boarding was filled should have waited for the next car. The counsel for defendant relies on the case of Paterson v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.,
The assignments of error are all overruled and the judgment is affirmed.