163 Ky. 79 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion op ti-ie Court by
Reversing.
"William Trowbridge sued the South Covington & Cincinnati Street Railway Company to recover damages for injuries sustained by him when thrown from a street oar operated by the defendant. There was. a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and defendant appeals.
Trowbridge boarded a street car in Cincinnati to go to his home in Oakdale, Kentucky. When the car reached Oakdale and was proceeding south over Huntington Avenue, and when about half a block from Oakdale Avenue, where he wished to alight, he signaled for the car to stop and went out on to. the rear platform of the car for the purpose of getting off.
As he stood there the car came to Oakdale Avenue without reducing speed, disregarding his signal, and entered upon a curve in the track. This curve begins approximately at the intersection of the street car tracks with the center line of Oakdale Avenue, and terminates
Trowbridge was standing on the platform with one hand resting upon, but not grasping, the hand-rail, and it seems that a lurch of the car about the time or just after it struck this curve in the track caused him to be thrown to the ground, whereby he sustained the injuries to recover damages for which he instituted this action.
The proof as to what caused Trowbridge to be thrown from the car is not clear, and is open to the interpretation that it was either the lurch of the car consequent upon its change of direction in striking the curve, or a jerk caused by the manner of its operation. He was asked whether there was any lurch or jerk to the car, and replied: “Yes, sir; jerked me; threw me off.” But at another place he says: " The car did not stop at all; went on past Oakdale Avenue, and struck the curve in the track there and threw me off the car.”
In Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Head, 59 S. W., 23, 22 E., 863, Head was aboard a train en route to Cavespring. When the train approached the station the usual station whistle was sounded, and Head left his seat and went out on to the platform of the coach while the train was- in motion. The train passed the station at a speed of thirty miles per hour; and Head either jumped or fell or was thrown from the platform and was injured. In that case it was contended for the railway company that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a directed verdict; and this court held that the issue of contributory negligence was properly submitted to the jury.
In the case of Louisville Railway Company v. Osborne, 157 Ky., 341, the court said: “It may or may not be negligence, depending on the facts of the particular ease, to make preparations to leave a railroad car before it comes to a stop, or to stand on the platform of the car of a railroad train while it is running. Sandlin v. Lexington Ry. Co., 110 S. W., 374; L. H. & St. L. Ry. Co., 142 Ky., 330. It is, however, customary for persons to stand on the platform of street cars while they are running, and to make preparations to leave the car before it comes to a stop. This custom is of such common and
In South Cov. & Cin. St. Ry. Co. v. Hardy, 152 Ky., 374, 153 S. W., 474, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.), 32, the passenger was riding on the platform because the interior of the car was crowded, and the court held that he was ‘ ‘ entitled to the same protection as if seated in the car and the company is charged with the duty of taking notice of the danger, if any, that attends his position, and must exercise corresponding care to protect him from accident.” In that case the car was going down a grade upon which the track was not in good condition, which caused a lurching of the car, throwing other passengers against appellee and knocking him from the car. Ac'cording to plaintiff’s evidence in the present case he rang the bell as a signal for the car to stop and the conductor saw him go out on the platform, But whether the conductor saw him or not, it would still be for the jury to say whether, in the exercise of the care which the carrier’s servants owed to the passenger, they could have known of his position on the platform; and if they could have known it, whether they operated the car in a manner comporting with that knowledge and with that care which they owed to the passenger. .
Of this instruction appellant complains upon the ground that it fails to require that the jerk or lurch should have been unusual, unnecessary and of such violence’ as to indicate a failure to exercise proper care in the operation of the car; and this complaint, we think, is well taken. The rule in this State is that the passenger who is injured by reason of a jerk or lurch of the conveyance may not recover therefor unless the jerk or lurch was unusual, unnecessary and of such violence as to indicate a want of the required care in the operation
The court should have instructed the jury, in sub- . stance, that if they believed from the- evidence that at the time of the accident to plaintiff, the defendant’s agents and servants in charge of the car knew, or, in the exercise of the highest degree of care for its passengers practicable and consistent -with the prudent management of the car, could have known, that plaintiff was upon the rear platform of the car; and, that defendant’s agents and servants in charge of the car operated it against or into the curve in the track at such a high rate of speed as to cause an unusual and unnecessary lurch of the car, of such violence that it would reasonably be expected to cause a passenger on the rear platform of the car, exercising ordinary care for his own safety, to be thrown therefrom; and that plaintiff, while exercising ordinary care for his own safety, if he was so doing, was thereby thrown from the car and injured, they should find for the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.