208 Pa. 623 | Pa. | 1904
Opinion by
J. B. Rowdin, the plaintiff, was employed by C. E. Quinton to accompany and superintend the shipment of two horses over the defendant’s road from Wissahickon Heights, in Pennsylvania, to Trenton, New Jersey. On the morning of August 26, 1901, the horses were putin a carat Wissahickon Heights and were taken to Chestnut Hill station on defendant’s road. Here the plaintiff alighted from the car, and a bill of lading was given him by the defendant’s agent in which it was “ mutually agreed, in consideration of the rate of freight hereinafter named,” that the defendant company would carry from Wissahickon Heights,.Pennsylvania, to Trenton, New Jersey, two horses with“l man in charge free.” The horses were consigned to C. E. Quinton. At the time he received the bill of lading, the plaintiff signed a release indorsed on the back of a contract known as the “ Uniform Live Stock Contract,” and therein, “ in consideration of the carriage of the undersigned upon a freight train of the carrier or carriers named in the within contract without charge further than the sum paid or to be paid for the carriage upon said freight train of the live stock mentioned in said contract,” he voluntarily assumed all risk of accidents or damage to his person or property, and released the defendant from all claims for any personal injury or damage of any kind sustained by him by reason of the negligence of the defendant or of any of its employees. The car with the plaintiff and the horses in it was taken from Chestnut Hill over the defendant company’s road to Germantown junction, where it was placed on a siding by itself to await the arrival of one of the defendant’s freight trains which was to take it to Trenton. After the car had been on the siding a short time and while the plaintiff was in it trying to quiet one of the horses, frightened by a passing train, another freight car on the same track loaded with oil collided with it. This is clearly a reasonable.inference from the evidence, and the jury would have been warranted in finding it as a fact. The collision was
At the conclusion of the testimony the trial judge affirmed defendant’s point that “ under all the evidence the verdict should be for the defendant,” and withdrew the case from the jury. His reason for giving binding instructions was that the release imposed “ upon the plaintiff the burden of proving that the defendant was guilty of negligence,” and that he had failed to show that his injuries resulted from defendant’s negligence. The learned judge also intimated that the plaintiff might be prevented from recovering by reason of the act of April 4,1868, 2 Purd. Dig. 1604, pl. 6, which relieves a railroad company from liability for injuries received by any person, not a passenger or its own employee, while engaged or employed about its road or cars.
In Pennsylvania Railroad Company v. Price, 96 Pa. 256, a passenger is defined to be “ one who travels in some public conveyance by virtue of a contract, express or implied, with the carrier, as payment of fare, or that which is accepted as an equivalent therefor.” The plaintiff when injured was being carried by the defendant company for a consideration under a contract which made him a passenger and was not “ riding upon what was equivalent to a free pass,” as suggested by the court below. The learned judge also says: “ He (plaintiff) had paid no fare and was not, in the ordinary sense of the word, a passenger upon the road of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company.” The contract and the release show that the consideration for the transportation of the plaintiff was included in “ the sum paid or to be paid for the carriage upon said freight train of the live stock mentioned in said contract.” For this consideration, the plaintiff was to be carried from Wissahickon Heights, Pennsylvania, to his destination at Trenton, New Jersey. By the terms of the contract the “ shipper is at his own risk and expense to load and take care of, and to feed and water, said stock whilst being transported.” It therefore be
We do not agree with the intimation of the court and the contention of the defendant, “ that the plaintiff was in the relation of an employee to the defendant under the provisions of the act of April 4, 1868, and was not a passenger.” As we
The cases cited and relied upon by the defendant wherein a postal clerk was held not to be a passenger and within the provisions of the act of 1868, are clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. A postal clerk is carried by a'railroad company by virtue of the act of congress, which provides that the company shall carry him without extra charge. Neither he nor his employer, the United States government, contracts with the company for his transportation. As said by Paxson, J., in Pennsylvania Railroad Company v. Price, supra: “This act (of congress) makes it the duty of the company to carry the mail agent without extra charge, but it no more makes him a passenger than it does the mail matter of which he has the care. The company have no control of him as they have over passengers, for whose safety they are responsible. He is not bound to observe any of the rules prescribed for the protection of passengers.” In this case the court in commenting on Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v. Henderson, supra, and noting the distinction between a mail agent and a person traveling with stock by virtue of a contract with the railroad company, says : “ There the plaintiff was a drover transporting his live stock upon the cars of the company. He had paid the freight on his stock, and at the same time received a pass for himself. He was traveling with his stock, and was as much a passen
As stated above, the court granted a nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to show that his injuries resulted from defendant’s negligence. It is well settled and was conceded by the trial judge that the release signed by the plaintiff did not relieve the defendant company from its' own or its servant’s negligence. Assuming, as we will, that the burden was on the plaintiff to show negligence, we think the facts, ' as disclosed at the trial, were sufficient to send the case to a •jury on the question of the defendant’s negligence. In not developing the facts more fully at the trial, the plaintiff took the chances of the jury finding against him, but that did not warrant the court in withdrawing the case from the jury. The plaintiff was injured while he was being carried by the defendant company over its railroad as a passenger, his injuries resulting from a violent collision between his car and another car on the defendant’s track. These facts are not consistent with care and prudence in operating the defendant’s road. The only infereneé arising from the facts is that the collision was caused by defective appliances of transportation or by the negligent operation of the cars on the defendant’s road, for either or both of which the company is responsible. A railway company has control of its road and - presumably of the cars and trains that are operated on it. When, therefore a collision occurs between trains or cars and injury results to a passenger, the happening of the collision is evidence of, or raises an inference of, the carrier’s negligence, and in an
The judgment is reversed with a venire de novo.