43 Mo. App. 342 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This ¿s a case of personal injury. The plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for $2,000. The defendant appeals.
At the close of the testimony the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that, under the pleadings and evidence, the plaintiff could not recover. The court declined to do so, and this adverse ruling constitutes the defendant’s first.assignment of error.
This assignment is sought to be sustained on two grounds: First. That the evidence failed to show that the alleged cause of the injury was produced by the negligence of the defendant’s servants in running the train; second, that the undisputed evidence showed that the plaintiff’s own negligence and recklessness contributed directly to his injuries.
To dispose of this assignment we will have to examine the pleadings and the evidence, upon which the plaintiff relies to uphold the judgment. The averments of the petition were to the effect, that the plaintiff went to a flag station on the defendant’s road in the state of Arkansas, for the purpose of taking passage on one of the defendant ’ s trains ; that the train which he expected to take was a freight train with a caboose attached ; that this train carried passengers, and that it was accustomed to stop at the flag station, when passengers wanted to get on or off, or when the train had freight for that station ; that, when the train approached the station, the pi aintiff gave the signal to stop; that in consequence the train slacked its speed, and, when the locomotive reached the point where the plaintiff was standing, the conductor of the train, who was riding- on the engine with th e engineer, told the plaintiff to get on; that he attempted to get on the
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that, at the time he received the injuries, he was between fourteen and fifteen years old, and that his father sent him to the flag station for the purpose of taking the train for Arkadelphia ; that, when he arrived at or near the platform of the station, the section-hands, who were putting in a new switch at the station, gave a signal to the approaching train, when distant about one-fourth of a mile, to run slowly over that portion of the road; that the engineer obeyed the signal by sounding the whistle for brakes ; that the train came up to the station running at the rate of four miles an hour, or as the plaintiff himself put it, “about as fast as he could walk ; ” that, just before the train got to where the plaintiff was standing, he gave a signal for it to stop ; that the train was running south, and when the locomotive reached the plaintiff he was standing about fifty feet north of the platform, the usual place for getting on this train ; that the conductor was riding with the engineer on the engine, and, when they passed the plaintiff, the conductor called to him to hurry up and get on ; that thereupon he walked about one hundred feet in the opposite direction from which the train was running, and when the caboose was opposite to him he attempted to get on it; that he- succeeded in getting on the steps of the front platform, when the train gave a sudden jerk or
We are of the opinion that the first ground of non-suit is untenable. The plaintiff ’ s evidence showed that he was thrown from the caboose by reason of a sudden . jerk or lurch of the train. The argument is now made that there is no direct proof that the sudden jerk was occasioned by the acts of the persons in charge of the train; that, for aught that appears in the record, the lurch was produced by natural causes, over which the defendant’s servants had no control; and that this state of the proof left the cause of the lurch a matter of conjecture which would prevent a recovery.
Whether the plaintiff at the time he received the injury was a passenger on the defendant’s train, or occupied the position of a stranger, cuts some figure in determining the sufficiency of the plaintiff ’ s proof to establish a liability of the defendant. If the ¿daintiff’s evidence is to be credited, he occupied the relation of a passenger at the time he received the injuries. The actual entry into the cars, and the payment of fare, are not essential to create the relation of passenger and carrier. Cleveland v. Steamboat Co., 68 N. Y. 306; Gordon v. Railroad, 40 Barb. 546; Smith v. Railroad, 32 Minn. 1; Allender v. Railroad, 37 Iowa, 264; Brien v. Bennett, 8 Car. & P. 724; Hutchinson on Carriers, secs. 556, 562; Shearman _& Redfield on Neg. [4 Ed.]
The objection that is now urged was presented in the case of Dougherty v. Railroad, 81 Mo. 325. The evidence in that case showed that the plaintiff, after getting on the street car and before he could procure a seat, was thrown down by a sudden jerk of the car. There was nothing to show the cause of the jerk. The defendant argued that there could not be a recovery, because there was no direct proof that the sudden movement of the car was occasioned by any act of the driver or team. The court in passing on this objection stated the rule to be: “That, where the vehicle or conveyance is shown to be under the control or management of the carrier or his servants, and the accident is such as, under an ordinary course of things, does not happen, if those who have the management use proper care, it affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of explananation by the defendant, that the accident arose from want of care.”
The argument may be made that this rule cannot govern the present case for the reason, that freight trains in the usual and ordinary manner of operating them are subject to sudden jerks, which may be produced by causes over which the trainmen have no control whatever. If the sudden lurch of which plaintiff
Under the foregoing authorities we are inclined to the opinion that it is not necessarily negligent for a person'to attempt to get on or off a train moving at the rate of four miles an hour. * Our common knowledge and experience teaches us that, under favorable circumstances, this may be done ‘with comparative safety. Under certain conditions or environments such an act might be held to be legal negligence. But, on the other hand, if it was in the daytime, and there were no obstructions in the way or other hindering causes, a case would be presented in which fair inferences might be drawn both ways. It is, therefore, impossible, to formulate a rule by which all cases can be governed. Each case must stand or fall on its own peculiar facts. In the present case the plaintiff was young and active ; he was
In the case of Hunter v. Railroad, 112 N. Y. 371, upon which the plaintiff chiefly relies, it was expressly stated in the opinion that the plaintiff was a man of full age and mature judgment, and that, for this reason among- others, his attempt to get aboard a train running at the rate of four miles an hour, must be held to be contributory negligence. In the present case the plaintiff was a youth ; and, while it may be said that he was familiar with trains, and knew as much about the dangers attending their operation as an adult, yet his actions cannot be judged by the same standard which is usually applied to the conduct of persons of full age. He may have possessed the requisite knowledge, but on account of his age he may have lacked discretion or judgment. We do not mean to intimate or decide that there may not be cases, in which legal negligence may be imputed to a boy of fifteen years of age, who is of' average intelligence. But what we mean to say is that, when the case is on the border line, the tender age of the complainant furnishes an additional reason for the submission of the question to the jury.
The defendant next complains of the instructions. Plaintiff’s first instruction is not open to the objections-urged against it by the defendant’s counsel. The plaintiff’s right of recovery was not predicated on the negligence of the conductor in his direction to the plaintiff' to get on the train while it was in motion.
The plaintiff’s second instruction told the jury that, in determining the question of contributory negligence, they should consider the age and discretion of the-plaintiff, and that the law required of him the exercise of that care that a boy of his age would ordinarily use under like circumstances. There was no direct evidence-
The defendant’s evidence was to the effect, that the-train was running at the,rate of six or eight miles an hour. Its counsel asked the court to direct the jury that, if the train was running at that rate of speed, the plaintiff was guilty of [legal negligence. The question presented is somewhat perplexing. All judges must-admit that the speed of a train may be such* that it would be foolhardy for a person under any circumstances to attempt to get on or off. But the rate of speed which will authorize a court to so direct a jury is the troublesome question. The rule is that, if the train is running so fast that to get on or off would be exceedingly dangerous, then such act must be held negligent as a matter of law. It is very easy to state the rule, but its application in some cases must, of necessity, appear arbitrary. “It is one thing,” Judge Woodward observed in the-Pennsylvania Ry. Co. v. Kilgore (32 Penn. St. 292), “to define a principle of law, and a very different-matter to apply it well; the rights and duties of parties-grow out of the circumstances in which they are placed.” This is the reason why we find so great a diversity of' opinion on the question of negligence in the adjudicated cases. There is, and can be, no well-defined rule on the-subject; hence, the courts in New York (Hunter v. Railroad, supra) decide that it is legal negligence for a person to get on or off a train moving at the rate of four miles an hour ; whereas the supreme court of this state holds that whether the same act is negligent or not, must depend upon the ati "ding circumstances ; that contrary inferences may be i. ’-’wn, and that the question should be submitted to , " If to get on or off a train running at the rate oi _ *r miles an hour is not negligence per se, would such an act be so regarded if the train was running at twice that rate of
In view of a retrial we would suggest that the plain'tiff’s evidence tends to show that the accident was <- occasioned by a sudden jerk of the train while he was in ■ the act of getting aboard the caboose. This particular ’issue is not clearly but only inferentially made by the -averments in the petition. We think the petition ought to be so amended as to squarely tender that issue.