43 F. 463 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee | 1890
This is a suit for an injury to the plaintiff’s foot, sustained by the working of the hotel elevator, which injury, the declaration alleges, was caused by the negligence of the defendant, and without fault on the part of the plaintiff. The declaration undertakes to set out briefly the facts relied on to constitute negligence, in a narrative mode, and, among other things, states that the plaintiff entered the open door of the elevator, whereupon the conveyance began to ascend of its own accord. there being no conductor in charge, and the plaintiff, attempting to got out, was injured. The demurrer insists that the declaration, on its face, shows contributory negligence — First, by entering the elevator while the conductor was absent; and, secondly, by attempting to leave it when the ascent commenced. But the second ground of demurrer seems to be abandoned, since only the first is submitted by the brief of defendant’s counsel.
The declaration goes farther, perhaps, than it need to have gone under our system of pleading, in stating the facts so specifically; but, waiving that altogether, and under any system, it is always injudicious for a court to undertake, as a matter of more pleading, to determine a question of negligence, either original or contributory, in any case where the declaration or plea contains a substantial cause of action or defense. Xegligonoo is a mixed question of law and fact, sometimes largely depending upon inferences to be drawn wholly by the jury, and for the court to assume to decide them upon the necessarily brief statements of the conclusions of fact found in a pleading would be to usurp the function of the jury, or at least to trench upon it with insufficient knowledge of the
“We do not' decide, of course, that the negligent breach of a * * * .duty not constituting a willful tort would make the defendant liable, if the plaintiff’s negligence contributed to the injury, * * * but what we do decide is that the character of the duty, and the nature of the place where the injury was received, are important factors in the solution of the problem.”
And it was there held that knowledge of a danger or an unsafety does not always, and under all circumstances, preclude a recovery as a matter of law arising in the-pleadings. This case cites many recent and leading authorities on this subject of the knowledge of a danger being contributory negligence, from which it appears that it is not an absolute rule, as this demurrer assumes, that it is contributory negligence always to take the risk of a known danger. At all events, we cannot decide it ón a demurrer to a declaration in a case like this, but reserve it for the trial.
Demurrer overruled.