131 A. 396 | Conn. | 1925
The plaintiff's intestate, Clara St. John, was killed by a stroke from a passing automobile operated by the defendant Lawson, just after she had alighted from a trolley-car owned and operated by the defendant The Connecticut Company. The plaintiff brought action against Lawson and the defendant company, alleging that the death of his intestate was caused by the negligent operation of the trolley-car and of the automobile. A nonsuit was granted in favor of the defendant company, and the case proceeded to trial and judgment against Lawson. The *643 negligence alleged in the complaint against the company was the operation of its car at a dangerous and reckless speed, and greater than was reasonable and proper having regard to the width, traffic and use of the street, and so as to endanger life; that the intestate was a passenger upon a northbound one-man trolley car on Main Street in the city of Norwalk, and signaled the motorman to stop, which he did at a point seventy-five feet short of the usual and proper stopping-place at the corner of an intersecting street, and caused the intestate to alight at a place where she was not afforded reasonable opportunity to alight from the car in a safe place and without protecting her and warning her of danger from frequently passing vehicles.
From the testimony in the case, considered as favorably as possible for the plaintiff, it might reasonably be found that on November 26th, 1924, between four and five p. m., the intestate was a passenger riding homeward upon a double-truck closed and vestibuled car belonging to and operated by defendant company as a one-man car proceeding up Main Street, a paved and much-traveled street of the city; that she desired to alight at the corner of Delaware Avenue, an intersecting street, upon which she dwelt, and signaled to the conductor for a stop, or advanced and told him of her wish and placed her fare in the receiving box as she alighted; that on the northeast corner of Main Street and Delaware Avenue was a pole painted white to indicate a stopping-place for trolley-cars; that the motorman stopped the car at a point about fifteen feet south of this pole and the intestate, as soon as she had alighted, uttered a cry of fright, ran toward the sidewalk, a distance of about twelve feet, and was struck by the automobile driven by the defendant Lawson, inflicting an injury resulting in her death two *644 days afterward; that Delaware Avenue crosses Main Street diagonally; that the intestate came forward as the car approached the intersection of Delaware Avenue and stood in the vestibule until it stopped; and that in coming to a standstill the car made a quick stop.
There is nothing in the testimony to show that the speed at which the trolley-car had been running had anything to do with the position in which the intestate was placed, or influenced her conduct. Before she alighted, the car had come to a full stop, and it stayed long enough for her to alight and be clear of the car. Plaintiff's principal contention is that it is the duty of the company to exercise the highest practicable degree of human skill in the care and protection of passengers, and that this duty includes the duty of securing to them a safe place at which to alight and get beyond danger. This is undoubtedly true so far as the place to alight is provided by the carrier, or is affected and conditioned by the movement of the car itself. We find no authority, however, for the claim that this high degree of duty extends to the protection of a passenger, who has safely alighted from a car, from the effects of the negligence or other wrongdoing of a third party. The case of Ferguson v. ConnecticutCo.,
There was no duty on the part of the company to have its cars stop at the white-marked pole; it might stop at any convenient place in the vicinity provided exit was afforded upon a highway not defective or dangerous.Farrington v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co.,
Plaintiff's counsel cite Naylor v. Haviland,
Finally it is claimed by plaintiff that the motorman should have warned the intestate of the danger likely to arise from approaching automobiles. Such a danger is one incident when any passenger leaves a street-car upon the roadway and has to proceed from the point of alighting to a sidewalk or to a sidepath on which pedestrians are wont to walk. The danger is as well known to any pedestrian as to the motorman or conductor of a street-car, and is, withal, one over which the latter has no control. It is an ever-present danger, and one which is to be anticipated and avoided by a passenger, who alone has control over his own movements, and who must rely on his own precaution and judgment. A passenger can observe the roadway before and behind the place where he alights, and he certainly is in a better position to observe automobiles coming up from behind, especially, as in the instant case, where the motorman is on the forward part of the car, engaged in discharging his passengers, seeing that they deposit their fares; often, too, a motorman is occupied in giving out transfers. The car in the present case was a closed, vestibuled car, and partially filled with about twenty-five passengers. The possible back view of the motorman was limited to say the least. It is not practical for the carrier to provide guard and warning to passengers in such a position. In Oddy v. West End Street Ry. Co.,
We do not see, upon the testimony as appears in the record, how a jury could reasonably have found that any act or omission of the company or its motorman was the proximate cause of the injury to the intestate; the action of the court in refusing to set aside the nonsuit was correct.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.