3 Colo. App. 540 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
In April, 1890, Freudenstein took passage on the Rio Grande Road for Sargent, Colorado. He was the holder of a first class railway ticket, and bought Pullman transportation on what is called a tourist sleeper between Denver and Sargent. The car was “No. 462,” and in charge of a porter named Allen. The tourist sleepers differ slightly from the first class Pullman, in that they have no drawing rooms and no lavatories which interfere with the general structure of the car. As in the case of all sleepers, the berths opened on a center aisle, were provided to a certain extent with head and foot boards which separated the occupants, and the sleepers were protected by curtains from the general view. There was nothing to obstruct the observation of the porter in charge, and he could see the entire car from door to door, and 'observe the movements and conduct of the passengers. Some evidence was offered concerning the movements of Freudenstein from the time he got on the car until the loss; but it is
The liability of the company, if any, under these facts must of necessity spring from the terms of some express contract between the company and the passenger, or a contract to he implied from the circumstances of the accidental relation of passenger and carrier. This relation must measurably determine the obligations of the Pullman company, and fix the extent to which the proof must go if they are to respond to losses of this description. It is familiar learning that nothing would excuse the innkeeper or the common carrier when called on for a guest’s goods, or what may have been delivered for transportation, except proof that the loss was occasioned by the acts of God or the king’s enemies. They were both adjudged to be practically insurers of the property. Storms and armed enemies in open rebellion alone operated to excuse default in performance. The law to this day has practically remained unchanged. With the exceptions and reservations contained in modern bills of lading, and admitted by the courts to he binding as contracts under some circumstances, or with the force and effect of notices,
While we concede that the law has been thus settled, and that negligen ce must be shown before the plaintiff can recover, we do not agree with counsel as to what will discharge that duty. It is insisted that there must be positive evidence of a want of care, as’by proof of the absence of a proper and sufficient number of servants, a lack of the watch, which the cases decide the company must maintain, or some equivalent testimony showing the positive omission of what the law has
What a subsequent trial may disclose cannot be foreseen. The judgment will therefore be reversed and the case sent back for a new trial.
Reversed.