184 S.W.2d 93 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1944
Reversing.
The decision of the case depends upon what the duty a common carrier by motor bus is with respect to the place along the highway at which it discharges a passenger. The appeal is from a judgment for $2,000, recovered by the appellee, Mrs. Lizzie Woods. Her injuries consisted of a severe sprain and twist of her knee and body.
Mrs. Woods and her 19 year old son were passengers on a bus of the appellant, traveling south to Williamsburg, on March 17, 1943. They lived about 100 yards up a country road to the west of the highway, a mile or so north of Williamsburg. On signal of the son the bus stopped at the road entrance. It was customary for the busses to stop at this point upon request. Mrs. Woods was 60 years old and weighed 210 pounds. Her son preceded her down the steps, carrying the baggage. He assisted his mother to alight and no request for assistance was made of the operators of the bus. It was about 8 o'clock at night and dark. The lights of the bus were turned on and the defendant's witnesses say a spotlight illuminated the steps, but the plaintiff and her son say it did not. Mrs. Woods testified that she stepped down on to the concrete paving of the highway with one foot and with the other stepped into a hole alongside the paving. The son testified the hole was eight or ten inches deep and about a foot from the edge of the concrete. Stepping into the hole caused her to fall back against the bus momentarily, although she was holding on to her son for support. *775
The plaintiff's evidence was that the bus was stopped with the steps just off the flare or rounding mouth of the side road instead of near the center where the way was smooth and clear. The hole or gully had been made by wagons and cars turning into and coming out of the side road, and by the washing out of the gravel of which the shoulder of the highway and the road were made. The son knew the hole was there. The mother did not, but knew there were ruts in the road. The evidence for the defendant was that the steps of the bus were near or at the center of the side road and that there was no hole where the passengers got off.
The injured passenger had a ticket for Williamsburg and, of course, was entitled to transportation there. The stopping of the bus near her home was for her convenience and accommodation. She had gotten off there upon two previous occasions.
The case was submitted to the jury upon the predicate of the carrier owing its passenger the highest degree of care, not only to transport her to her destination but to afford or furnish a reasonably safe place to get off the bus. The instruction was patterned after that approved in Louisville
N. R. Co. v. Scarbrough,
First, we may say that there is no liability of the carrier for failing to assist the passenger to alight. The conditions were not such as to impute knowledge or an appreciation of the need for its employe to assist the passenger without request, and, as we have said no request was made. The adult son rendered that aid. Louisville N. R. Co. v. Dyer,
It is quite generally stated as fundamental law that it is the duty of a common carrier to exercise the highest degree of care towards its passengers. The statement may be too general and broad. It may be more definitely stated as the duty to exercise the highest *776
degree of care, skill and diligence for the safety of the passengers as is required by the nature and risk of the undertaking, in view of the mode of conveyance and other circumstances involved, which may vary according to the immediate activity, instrumentality, time or place. 13 C. J. S., Carriers, secs. 678, 683; Annotations, 96 A.L.R. 727; Shelton Taxi Co. v. Bowling,
Although they deal with the subject of a safe place at which to discharge passengers, we put aside cases involving injuries to passengers by other traffic where they were discharged in the street, except as they may reflect the applicable principle of law. Of such are Trout's Adm'r v. Ohio Valley Electric R. Co., supra; Tinnell v. Louisville R. Co.,
As is well said in 10 Am. Jur., Carriers, Sec. 1395: "A passenger bus company stands in a different position from that of a railroad or street car company. A railroad ordinarily has exclusive control over its stations and grounds where passengers are received and discharged and, in such case, the relationship of carrier and passenger continues, after the latter has alighted from the train, for a period of time reasonably necessary to enable him to leave the carrier's premises. The same situation does not ordinarily obtain in the case of passengers upon busses."
We quote also this pertinent statement of the law from Lewis v. Pacific Greyhound Lines, supra: "An automobile bus is able to move or stop in the street at the will of the driver. Ordinarily stations are not maintained *777
by such carriers. The safety of the place afforded the passenger for alighting is entirely within the control of the driver, and passengers are discharged to suit their convenience. The degree of care to be exercised must be commensurate with the danger involved. To discharge a passenger on a highway where he would be subject to the dangers of vehicular traffic would clearly not meet the degree of care which the law exacts. As stated in Roden v. Connecticut Co.,
In Hensley v. Braden,
We stated the very obvious law that a carrier may not lead a passenger into a trap by an implied invitation.
The law that a carrier must furnish a reasonably safe place for its passengers to alight has one meaning or application where it furnishes the station or platform or other facilities and another meaning or application where it does not do so. It seems to us that where a motor bus company lets a passenger off at his request and for his convenience at a place other than its station or platform, its duty is quite like that of a street railway company discharging passengers into the street, over which it has no control and for the condition of which it is in no way responsible. In such a case the carrier's duty is merely not to hazard the safety of the passenger by putting him off or allowing him to get off at a place which the carrier, through its employe, knows or ought to know is unsafe. Thus, in Sweet v. Louisville R. Co.,
It was held that the case should have been submitted to the jury upon the issues of whether the hole was the cause of the plaintiff's injury or was such a defective place for discharging passengers as to render it obviously unsafe. The decision seems to have been predicated upon the idea that the street railway company knew this large defect was in the street.
Of like character is Kentucky Traction Terminal Co. v. Soper,
The duty of a carrier with respect to affording a safe place for passengers to alight is not to be diminished as a broad statement of the law, and it may be said to exist where the place is provided by it or is affected or conditioned by the movement of the vehicle. But that duty under other conditions is satisfied if the carrier exercises the highest degree of care and skill which may reasonably be expected of intelligent and prudent persons engaged in such a business in view of the instrumentalities employed and danger naturally to be apprehended. 4 Blashfield's Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Perm. Ed. sec. 2172.
There are two outstanding facts in this case. One is that the Bus Company had no knowledge of the hole or rut alongside the paving, either actual or constructive. The carrier had the right to assume that the highway had been properly maintained by the State and, therefore, was not chargable with knowledge of the hole into which the plaintiff stepped. The other fact is that the passenger knew there were ruts in the road and did not look to see where she was stepping. The bus had stopped there *780 on her request and solely for her convenience. It was on the paved surface and it appears there wag ample room on the pavement for the passenger to have stepped.
The facts in MacDonald v. Philadelphia Rural Transit Co.,
"We are unable to find any reason for the driver of defendant's bus to have anticipated that the stop at the place requested by wife plaintiff to alight to reach her home would involve a peril to her. She assumed that the bus driver did not stop in the proximity of the highway defect, and that he had the same knowledge of the highway condition that she had. Acting on these false assumptions she stepped from the bus into the darkness without taking any precaution. See Fordyce v. White Star Bus Lines, Inc., supra, 304 Pa. [106], at page 112,
"We agree with the court below that the evidence does not justify a finding that defendant was guilty of any negligent act which made it liable for wife plaintiff's injury."
It seems to the court that under the circumstances the plaintiff failed to make out a case against the defendant and that the jury should have been directed to return a verdict in its favor.
Judgment reversed.
Whole Court sitting.