Powell v. Erie Railroad

70 N.J.L. 290 | N.J. | 1904

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, J.

This was an action to recover damages for personal injuries. The trial judge, at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, directed that judgment of nonsuit he entered. Reversal of this judgment is notv sought. Taking a view of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, the facts of the case are as follows: The plaintiff, an able-bodied man about twenty-one years of age, on an afternoon in the month of July, undertook to steal a ride upon a combined freight and coal train operated by the defendant. He jumped upon one of the coal cars while the train was in rapid motion, seized the grab-handle with both hands, and secured a footing with both feet upon the iron step at the side of the car. He had not reached a place of safety upon the train, but was in the act of climbing up. While he was in this position,, the train having run only a few feet after he jumped upon it, a man whom he did not see, but whom another witness undertook to identify as one of the brakemen of the train, began throwing pieces of stove coal toward the plaintiff. The brakeman stood upon a coal car, about three cars ahead of the plaintiff. Three pieces of coal were successively thrown. None of them struck the plaintiff, hut- they all struck the car near to him. The third piece would have struck him if *292lie had not “ducked” to avoid it. As he “ducked,” he released his hold upon the grab-iron and thereupon fell from the train, stumbled and was thrown under the wheels. For the physical injuries thus’sustained the present action was brought.

Assuming that the man who threw the coal was a brakeman in defendant’s employ, and was authorized to represent the defendant in ejecting a trespasser, so as to render the defendant responsible for his acts, within the rule laid down in West Jersey and Seashore Railroad Co. v. Welsh, 33 Vroom 655, we still think the judgment of nonsuit was correct. The plaintiff, on his own showing, was engaged in committing a trespass, which by our statute is made a misdemeanor. Pamph. L. 1898, p. 853, § 214. The defendant, therefore, owed to him no duty beyond refraining from acts willfully injurious to him. Excessive or improper force applied in the effort to eject him would, of course,.be actionable; but no physical force was exerted; he was not touched by any of the pieces of coal. His case, therefore, must rest, if at all, upon the ground that he was so threatened with violence by the brakeman that either in the necessary attempt to avoid it he accidentally lost his hold upon the car, or that he was so overcome with fear that thereby he lost his presence of mind and self-control, and for this reason let go his hold. Neither ground is tenable in view of the evidence. It is not pretended by plaintiff either that he accidentally let go his hold or that he lost his presence of mind. The rational explanation, and in our opinion the only rational explanation of the evidence, is that the throwing of the coal gave notice to the plaintiff that his attempt to climb upon the train had been discovered and would be resisted, and that thereupon he abandoned his attempt, voluntarily released his hold and fell or jumped to the ground.

In view of the age of the plaintiff and the other circumstances disclosed in the evidence, the case is clearly distinguishable from Ansteth v. Buffalo Railway Co., 145 N. Y. 210; 39 N. E. Rep. 708, and cases there cited. Cases more *293nearly in point are Planz v. Boston and Albany Railway Co., 157 Mass. 377; 32 N. E. Rep. 356, and Mugford v. Boston and Maine Railroad Co., 173 Mass. 10; 52 N. E. Rep. 1078.

It is entirely clear that the plaintiff voluntarily abandoned his attempt to board the car, and that if the Hying coal put him at all in fear, it did not cause him to lose his self-control. In effect, it amounted- to no more than a peremptory command to do that which the law itself commanded. The duty 'of jumping to the ground while the train was in motion was a duty that the plaintiff assumed by attempting to board the . train while in motion. The one was to him ho more dangerous than the other. Indeed, he was simply interrupted while still engaged in the hazardous operation of climbing upon the car. It is, of course,-absurd to say that by merely gaining a foothold upon the moving train he could impose a duty upon the railroad company either to permit him to ascend or to stop the train for his convenience.

If a statute were needed as support for the proposition that a person injured while jumping on or off- a train in motion is guilty of contributory negligence, such an enactment is to be found in Pamph. L. 1869, p. 806, which was embodied in the revised act concerning railroads and canals, approved March 27th, 1874. Gen. Stat., p. 2680, §.178.

The judgment under review -should be affirmed.

For affirmance — -The Chancelxor, Chief'Justice,Dixon, Garrison, Fort, Pitney, Swayze, Bogert, Vredenburgi-i, Green, Gray. 11. For reversal — Hendrickson, Vroom. 2.