157 Mass. 224 | Mass. | 1892
The plaintiff complains, in his declaration, that the street car at or near the junction of Paradise Road, so called, and Elm Street, was suddenly started up without notice to his intestate, whereby she, being a passenger upon it, was thrown upon the ground and injured. He introduced evidence tending to show that the intestate told the conductor 11 that she wished to get off at Paradise Road, and that the conductor nodded his head.” The plaintiff’s counsel asked the court to instruct the jury that, if the intestate “gave notice to the conductor where she intended to get off the car, he was bound to remember it, and take suitable action with reference to said notice." The exceptions recite that “the conductor testified that he was looking out for Mrs. Robinson, knew where she lived, and stopped the car for her and another passenger to get off at Paradise Road; that after the other passenger had alighted he noticed that Mrs. Robinson did not arise, and he thought that she intended to go further. He neither called out the name of the street, nor attracted her attention in any way, and gave the signal for the car to start, after which she arose and stepped off the moving car.” But the plaintiff’s testimony
It appeared that the car on this trip was nearly or quite filled with passengers. It was not the custom on this street railway for conductors of cars to call out the streets. The plaintiff's intestate had resided for five years in a house directly opposite the entrance to Paradise Road, and was accustomed to ride on the street cars, and was perfectly familiar with all the localities along the route on which the car was going, and it was daylight when the accident occurred.
It seems to be the contention of the plaintiff’s counsel, that the conductor was absolutely bound to remember the notice which he received from the plaintiff’s intestate, and was absolutely bound, not only to stop the car at Paradise Road a reasonable length of time for the plaintiff’s intestate to alight, but also to give her express notice that the car had stopped there in order that she might get off. We think that the court rightly refused to give the instruction requested, and that the instructions given were sufficiently favorable to the plaintiff. The court instructed the jury that the fact of notice, if the plaintiff’s intestate gave notice, was one circumstance to be considered, in connection with others, upon the question of the negligence of the conductor and the due care of the plaintiff’s intestate.
Exceptions overruled.
The instructions were as follows: “ There was some argument made by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, that the giving of that notice and the nodding of the head by the conductor, if he did nod, constituted a .contract binding absolutely upon the defendant corporation. For the purposes of this case, I must state a different view of the law. ... I do not understand that the law, aside from any special authority conferred by the corporation, vests the conductor of a horse car with the right to make any special contract between the defendant corporation and a passenger. ... On the contrary, if the passenger gives to the conductor any notice pertaining to his transportation, that notice may more or less affect the corporation in the matter of negligence or non-negligence towards the passenger. I do not think the law imposes upon the conductor, or upon the corporation rather, an absolute duty to see to it that the conductor remembered that notice when he got to Paradise Road. I do not think the law vests a passenger with a legal right to impose upon the defendant corporation a legal obligation that a conductor shall remember, infallibly, a notice given him, when a passenger takes a car, in regard to some point at which the passenger wishes to get off.