181 Mass. 422 | Mass. | 1902
This is an action for personal injuries. The plaintiff was a United States postal clerk running from Boston to New York, and paying no fare. U. S. Rev. Sts. § 4000. At the time of the accident his mail car had reached the New York station and, after remaining there five or six minutes, had been placed upon a side track and had been there ten minutes. By the negligence of a servant of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, a ear which should have been shunted to another track was turned on to the side track and ran into the postal car. The plaintiff was in the postal car, unloading the mail, and was hurt. At the trial the judge directed a verdict for the defendant, and the case is here on exceptions.
We are of opinion that the direction was right. Assuming for the purposes of decision that the plaintiff originally and still
There have been suggestions in some cases looking in the direction of the defendant’s liability. Railroad Co. v. Barron, 5 Wall. 90, 104. Murray v. Lehigh Valley Railroad, 66 Conn. 512. But even if it were shown, as it is not, that the defendant had done an act which in a remote sense made the accident possible, such as making some contract of letting or hiring with the New York Central road, to our mind it confuses all principles of liability based upon fault when such an act is relied upon as a sufficient ground of responsibility. Remote acts of a defendant always can be shown without which the accident would not have happened. But the question is whether they are near enough to be regarded as the cause. A lease does not make either party the servant of the other in fact, and there seems to be no ground for resorting to fiction. The contract of carriage is interpreted as applying to the instrumentalities of carriage even when belonging to others, so far as to make the carrier answerable for their negligence, but the liability still stands on fault and the best considered cases agree that there is no reason for extending it to the incursions of other carriers not
Exceptions overruled.