151 Mass. 220 | Mass. | 1890
In considering whether, as matter of law, the plaintiff has failed to show that she was in the exercise of due care, and was thus guilty of negligence which contributed to the injury which she sustained, it is to be considered, whatever contradictions may exist, that the testimony offered by herself and on her behalf was that which was relied upon by the jury. According to this, “when she reached the forward platform of the rear car” of the train upon which she took passage from Malden for Boston, “she mounted the steps thereof as fast as she could, and as she mounted the steps she glanced into the rear car, and, as it looked full, she turned about and looked into the forward car, and, as said ear did not look so full, she proceeded, while the train was at rest, to pass forward to the car next in front of said rear car; that in passing over to the forward car without looking to see where she stepped, just as the train started she placed her foot upon the buffers between said cars; and that when the cars started the buffers opened, her foot slipped down between the buffers, and her great toe was caught and jammed.” There was evidence from the plaintiff, or her witnesses, that she had been lame for many years; that she often travelled on this train; that it made a shorter stop than usual; that it started with a jerk; that the distance between the two rear cars was about six inches; that there was nothing to prevent the plaintiff from stepping from one platform to the other; and that the tops of the buffers were nearly on a level with the platforms of the cars. These buffers were iron plates attached to the ends of rods running beneath the cars, and lengthwise thereof, which played upon each other, as the train moved, by means of spiral springs attached to the ends of said rods, the play between the buffers being about two inches. The cars were properly constructed and equipped, and the platforms and buffers thereof were in good condition at the time of the injury.
The ground upon which the conduct of the plaintiff is sought to be vindicated in failing to look where she should have looked, and in placing her foot where she should not have placed it, is that the train was not then in motion, and that when it started it did so with a jerk, and after a shorter stop than usual. The train had no fixed length of time for its stop, nor, so far as appears, any time arranged for its starting, so that one could fairly calculate that it would not start until that time arrived. Even if its stop was shorter than usual, its stops were regulated only by the exigencies of its business at the station. Nor even if the train started with a jerk had the plaintiff a right to assume that it would not do so, and for that reason to put herself in a place which must be one of danger if such a thing occurred. The motion which is communicated to the various cars of a train by the engine is not simultaneous, but successive, and it is well known that this is not done always
Exceptions sustained.