44 Neb. 167 | Neb. | 1895
About 6 o’clock P. M. of the 29th day of November, 1892, the plaintiff, a lad fourteen years of age, employed in one of the packing houses at South Omaha, boarded one of the defendant’s motor trains in order to reach his home in the city of Omaha. When he approached the train, which was then waiting at the southern terminus of the line, he observed that the seats were all occupied and that there was not even standing room remaining inside. He, however, secured standing room on the rear platform of the trailer, where he remained until the train started about five minutes later, and until it made the first stop four blocks distant for the purpose of allowing a passenger to alight. At that point he was, according to his testimony, on account of the pressure of passengers from within, compelled to step from his position to the ground in order to make room for the passenger above mentioned, when his place was immediately filled by other passengers, leaving
It is necessaxy to notice but a single paragraph of the petition, viz.: “ That said defendant, through carelessness and negligence in not providing cars enough for the transportation between said points, caused a. dangerously lai’ge crowd of people to board said ear on which the plaintiff was a passenger; that the said defendant, through its agents and servants, when said car in which the. plaintiff was a passenger was loaded with all the passengers it could safely carry, negligently and carelessly suffered and permitted a large additional number of people to board said car and overci’owd the same; that by reason of so dangerously large a ci’owd negligently and carelessly suffered and permitted on said car by defendant, the plaintiff was fox’ced off said car to allow fellow-passengers to alight therefrom; that imme
In Ray, Negligence of Imposed Duties, 43, it is said that the front platform of a crowded street car is not a place of known danger so as to render it negligence per se
In Germantown P. R. Co. v. Walling, 97 Pa. St., 55, the plaintiff voluntarily got upon a car so crowded that he was obliged to stand on one of the steps of the platform, which was also occupied by two other persons, and where, in order to retain his position, he was required to hold with one hand to the dashboard and with the other to the iron bar under the window of the car. The court, referring to the question of contributory negligence, say: “Street railway companies have all along considered their platforms as a place of safety, and so have the public. Shall the court say that riding on a platform is so dangerous, that one who pays for standing there can recover nothing for an injury arising from the company’s default?”
In Meesel v. Lynn & B. R. Co., 8 Allen [Mass.], 234, it is said: “The,seats inside are not the only places where the managers expect passengers to remain, but it is notorious that they stop habitually to receive passengers to stand inside until the car is full, and continue to stop and receive them even after there is no place to stand except on the steps of the platforms. Neither the officers of these corporations, nor the managers of the cars, nor the traveling public seem to regard this practice as hazardous, nor does experience thus far seem to require that it should be restrained on account of the danger. There is, therefore, no basis upon which the court can decide, upon the evidence reported, that the plaintiff did not use ordinary care.”
In Nolan v. Brooklyn City & N. R. Co., 87 N. Y., 63, the plaintiff, a passenger on a street car, rode on the front platform of his own choice for the purpose of smoking, there being room inside. He was thrown from the car and injured through the defendant’s negligence, and was permitted to recover.
In Topeka City R. Co. v. Higgs, 38 Kan., 379, it was held gross negligence on the part of a street railway com
In Geitz v. Milwaukee City R. Co., 72 Wis., 307, the plaintiff at the time of the injury was standing on the foot-board extending lengthwise along the car, which was crowded with passengers, yet the question of negligence was held to have been properly submitted to the jury.
City R. Co. v. Lee, 50 N. J. Law, 438, presents substantially the same state of facts as the case last cited, and the judgment in favor of the plaintiff was affirmed. And the doctrine above announced finds support also in the following among many other cases: Maguire v. Middlesex R. Co., 115 Mass., 239; Fleck v. Union R. Co., 134 Mass., 481; Upham v. Detroit City R. Co., 85 Mich., 12; Archer v. Ft. Wayne & E. R. Co., 87 Mich., 101; Matz v. St. Paul City R. Co., 53 N. W. Rep. [Minn.], 1071.
The record is silent on the subject of the defendant’s notice of the condition of the train, but in the absence of evidence we must presume that the plaintiff, if not invited to become a passenger, was present with the knowledge and consent of the conductor. It follows that the boarding of the crowded train, under the circumstances disclosed, was not such negligence as to alone justify the trial court'in directing a verdict against the plaintiff.
Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence in leaving the rear of the train and taking a position on the front step of the trailer? There are-certain material facts which must not be overlooked in the determination of that question. In the first place, the relation of carrier and passenger existed at that time, and the defendant, having voluntarily assumed the responsibility of safely carrying plaintiff, owed him a duty in that regard, and is at least presumptively liable for the concurrent negligence of its servants and third persons. (Sheridan v. Brooklyn C. & N. R. Co., 36 N. Y., 39;
Q. Were you able to get any further in the car at that time?
A. No, sir.
Q. Why?
A. Because the car was moving and I would have run a great risk to crowd in.
Q,. Had the car not started so soon, could you have gotten further on the platform?
A. Yes; I think I could. I am pretty sure I could.
Q. Could you have pulled up any further on the platform wdthout letting go your grip on the hand rails?
.A. No.
The rule is too well settled in this state to admit of a doubt or to require a citation of the cases, that where different minds may draw different conclusions from the facts
Reversed and remanded.