196 F. 484 | 9th Cir. | 1912
The defendant in error brought this action in the court below to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him because of the negligence of the defendant to the action, the plaintiff in error here. The negligence alleged was that the defendant permitted snow and ice to accumulate upon the steps of one of its street cars on which the plaintiff was a passenger, and that in alighting at a street corner at which the car had stopped the plaintiff slipped upon one of the steps, because of the snow and ice so negligently permitted to accumulate, resulting in the injury for which he sued. In its answer the defendant denied any negligence on its part, and set up affirmatively contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff.
The only one of the two points here presented that we can consider relates to the refusal of the court below to give to the jury a certain requested instruction. We are unable to see how counsel for the plaintiff in error can say in their brief, as they do, that:
“Plaintiff himself testified that he saw no snow or ice on the steps when he hoarded the car. The car then ran about four miles, constantly taking on and letting off passengers throughout the snow-covered city. These facts are uncontradicted.”
Turning to the transcript, we find this in the testimony of the plaintiff :
“There were two steps on this car, and snow showed at each end of the step just, as it apparently had. fallen, and also showed a broken line clear through with toe marks hero and there. Where I slipped was simply ice, slick as glass, with an angle down. Just as (¡nick as my feet struck there, they fiew from under me, and my back struck the step. The ice was one or two inches thick at the rear of the steps, and down to a feather edge at the outer part of the step. It covered the entire step. The snow did not appear to be what passengers might have tracked in. 1 remained on the ear until I reached Thirty-Fifth and Stevens streets, about two blocks from my house. Mr. liisby and his son assisted me off the car, and assisted me home. At that time I noticed the snow on the steps. The weather that day was pretty cold. It was not thawing when I fell on the street. There was no snow, but ice, on the paved street. On this day I do not remember that any snow or sleet fell. The day was quite cold, and on the day before I was working building a chimney, and, in order to work, we had to clean off quite a lot of snow to get at the work. As the conductor picked me up, he remarked that I slipped on the ice of the step, and I said, ‘Tt is a pity you could not clean it off.’ He said, T tried to clean it off and could not.’ ”
Of course, this was testimony tending to show negligence on the part of the defendant, which was one of the questions for the jury to determine.
The requested instruction which the court refused to give, and to which action the defendant reserved art exception, is as follows:
“I instruct you that the fact that there was snow and ice on the step of the car from which plaintiff was alighting at the time of his injury constitutes*486 no evidence of the negligence of the defendant. It is shown by the evidence that there was snow on the ground at the time of the accident. You will call to your aid your experience at a time like that, and, if you find that the accumulation of snow and ice’ on the step could not have been prevented by ordinary care, it will be your duty to find for the defendant.”
“This rule of law tliat I have explained, that refers to tbis very bigb degree of care, would apply to tbe cleaning off of any ice that might be upon tbe car when it leaves tbe shop or tbe car barn in tbe morning. Tbe company would be bound to exercise tbis very bigb degree of care to see that its car when it starts out in tbe morning for tbe general business of transporting passengers is safe if it can be made safe by tbis very bigb degree of care. A different rule applies, however, to snow that accumulates upon a car during its ordinary use as tbe day progresses. The common experience of mankind is that in snowy weather that more or less .snow is tracked in upon tbe car during the progress of snow storms. Of course, more or less snow alights upon tbe ear. I understand tbe evidence here, if I am mistaken counsel will correct me, is uncontradicted that no snow fell upon tbe day of tbe accident, but tbe evidence is also uncontradicted that there was more or less snow upon the ground, in tbe neighborhood of seven inches, or at a later time reduced to five. Just bow much was on tbe ground at tbe time of tbe occurrence is for you to say from tbe evidence. If snow which is upon tbe ground is tracked upon tbe car during its passing to and fro in tbe ordinary prosecution of business, tbe company is bound to remove that snow, but it is not bound to exercise that very bigb, extraordinary degree of care that I have mentioned.
“The employés upon tbe ear have other duties to perform, and you are to consider tbe reasonable and practical operation of tbe car. Tbe degree of care that should be exercised to remove snow that accumulates from being tracked in by passengers is tbe ordinary degree of care that is tbe usual care that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under like circumstances and conditions. That is the usual rule of care that applies to tbe ordinary individuals in tbe ordinary affairs of life, namely, to exercise that degree of care and prudence which is commonly exercised by persons of ordinary care and prudence under like circumstances and conditions. If tbe snow aceumlat-ed there during tbe day as tbe movements of tbe car progressed, and it was snow which should have been removed in tbe exercise of that ordinary care and still remained there, and by reason of its being there tbe plaintiff was injured, then its being there was negligence. If, however, it was an accumulation of snow of such character that the employés of tbe company in the exercise of ordinary care would not have removed it, but might be there in spite of their exercise of ordinary prudence, then its existence would not be negligence.”
The judgment is affirmed.