186 N.Y. 347 | NY | 1906
Lead Opinion
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while a passenger upon an electric car operated by the Niagara Falls *349 Park and River Railway Company in the Dominion of Canada on September 10, 1899. The defendant is the successor in interest of that corporation and no question is raised as to its liability herein in case there is any liability at all. The accident out of which the action arose occurred while the plaintiff was endeavoring to change his seat in the car. For this purpose he stepped down upon the running board, and while there his body was brought into collision with one of the trolley poles between the tracks and he was thrown down and injured. The plaintiff was a large man, weighing two hundred and fifty pounds, and measuring twenty-four inches across the shoulders and twenty inches through the body. He had never before visited Niagara Falls, in the vicinity of which the accident occurred. Having crossed the arch bridge into Canada he took passage on the car, which was bound southward along the edge of the gorge. It was an open car with cross seats and one seat at the rear end facing backward. The plaintiff took this seat within a few feet of the place where the conductor stood. There were no other passengers on that portion of the car. When the car stopped at a place known as the Dufferin Café many of the passengers alighted and the plaintiff observed that the two rear seats in the body of the car were vacant. Thereupon he remarked to the conductor: "I see them two rear seats are empty. I will take one of those seats." To which the conductor responded, "Go and take it with pleasure," or as the plaintiff stated on cross-examination, "Take one with pleasure." Then, according to the plaintiff's testimony, he swung out to get into the other seat but came into contact with the trolley pole, the car being then running, according to his estimate, at a rate of from eight to ten miles an hour. Although there was evidence in behalf of the defendant to the effect that the conductor shouted, "Look out for the pole," the plaintiff testified that the conductor said nothing more than has already been stated and did not say anything about the trolley pole. The proof is that the distance between the so-called grab handles on the outside of the upright stanchions of the car and the trolley *350 pole was twenty-one inches, according to the evidence in behalf of the plaintiff, and twenty-two inches according to the evidence in behalf of the defendant. The plaintiff made the further statement that when he started to go out on the running board to change his seat the conductor was looking at him.
The case went to the jury solely on the question whether there was negligence on the part of the conductor in having either in his words or by his conduct assented to the act of the plaintiff in leaving his place on the rear of the car to go in front, without giving some warning or intimation of the danger involved in such a movement. The learned trial judge expressly ruled that the railroad company had the right to construct its tracks and poles in the way in which they were constructed and to run its cars in the manner in which they were run, and that the cars were in proper shape, the road was in proper shape, and the poles were in proper condition. The question presented by this appeal, therefore, is whether the conductor in charge of the car upon which the accident occurred was negligent either in giving the plaintiff a false assurance of safety or in failing to give him a proper warning.
In the case of a railroad company which is a common carrier of passengers it may be assumed that where a danger arises which is unknown to the passenger but which is known, or ought to be known, to the agents of the carrier charged with the management of the train, a duty exists on the part of those agents to warn the passenger of the danger or to take some other means to guard him against it. The present case, however, involves the question whether any duty to warn exists where all the conditions which constitute the danger are as observable by the passenger himself and apparently as obvious to him as they are known to the agents or servants of the common carrier. In the simple assent of the conductor to the proposal of the plaintiff to change his seat I am unable to perceive any assurance on the part of the conductor that it would be safe for the passenger to do so without the exercise of due care on his part in executing the necessary movement. The construction of the car and of the railroad line and the *351 position of the trolley poles and the size of his own body were just as patent to the plaintiff as they could have been to the conductor. It is true the plaintiff says he was sitting on the rear end looking at the American side and the scenery and did not notice the location of the trolley poles. We must also accept as true his statement that he had never been over the line before. These facts, however, could hardly have been known to the conductor. The learned counsel for the respondent insists that the conductor was chargeable with knowledge of the position of the poles, the construction of the car, the size of the plaintiffand the fact that the plaintiff was ignorant of the conditionssurrounding him; but I can find nothing in the record which furnishes any basis for the assumption that the conductor knew that the plaintiff was not acquainted with these conditions. He certainly appears to have had the amplest opportunity to notice them. It was entirely possible by the exercise of care for the plaintiff to change his seat as he desired by proceeding along the running board on the other side of the car or by waiting until the car was between two of the trolley poles, when he would incur no danger; and there appears to have been nothing in the expression of his intention to make the change which would necessarily indicate to the conductor that he proposed to attempt it at the precise time when he did.
It seems to me quite clear that it would be going too far to hold the railway company responsible for the failure of a conductor to warn a passenger under the circumstances presented by this record. Although the duty to warn has frequently been asserted I have been unable to find any case with a single exception hereafter to be noted which lays down so stringent a rule against a common carrier as would be established by the affirmance of this judgment. No doubt there is an implied duty on the part of a railroad corporation engaged in the transportation of passengers to employ a competent conductor. (Lambeth v.N.C.R.R. Co.,
None of the authorities cited in the brief for the respondent in support of the proposition that it was the duty of the conductor to warn the plaintiff seems to me to support his contention in that respect. I have carefully examined them all and deem them readily distinguishable in principle from the case at bar. Lent v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co. (
The single case which tends to uphold the position of the respondent is West Chicago Street R.R. Co. v. Marks (
The distinction between this Illinois case and the case at bar lies in the fact that the viaduct there in proximity to the railroad was no part of the railroad line, and was so close to the track that persons riding on the running board were obliged to take special care to avoid contact with it, while here the distance between the trolley poles and the car was shown by uncontradicted evidence to be great enough to enable persons ordinarily to stand upon or pass along the running board in safety, and the trial court expressly negatived the idea that any negligence could be predicated upon the manner in which the railroad was constructed and maintained. Indeed, there was no evidence that the construction of the railroad here was unusual, or that the distance between the running boards of the car and the trolley poles was such as was likely to endanger passengers making the ordinary and customary use of such running boards, or that the manner in which the road was built and maintained was in any respect such as to render the railroad company chargeable with negligence in the maintenance of the various structures making up the line as they existed at the time of the accident. This court said in Craighead v. Brooklyn City R.R. Co. (
I concede the correctness of the general proposition that if the company had created a danger it was its duty to warn its passengers against that danger, but under the charge of the trial judge and upon the theory on which the case was submitted to the jury the appellant had not created any danger in the proper sense of that term. Doubtless the presence of trolley poles is dangerous to any one riding on a car who may come in contact with them. So, also, there are dangers in the operation of every steam railroad, but these dangers are inherent in the operation of the roads and do not fall within the rule I have stated. If there was anything exceptional in *357
the proximity to the track of the trolley poles or any other obstruction it would have been the duty of the conductor to warn the plaintiff of its existence, but I cannot see that it was his duty to warn the passenger of a danger which is merely an ordinary incident of such railroad travel. This is the crux of this case and the sole question that was submitted to the jury. Take the case of the trolley roads which run under the elevated railroads in the city of New York. It cannot be that it is the duty of the conductor to warn every passenger of the presence of the pillars of the elevated railroad, nor can he be expected for this purpose to distinguish between residents of the city accustomed to travel on the road and passengers who are strangers. In Murphy v. Ninth Ave. R.R. Co. (
I think this judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide event.
Dissenting Opinion
The plaintiff was a passenger and entitled to the high degree of care to which that relation to the defendant gave him the right by law. He was a stranger to the locality, the railway and its surroundings. He had never seen Niagara Falls before and had taken passage in an observation car of unusual size, used in a national park to enable strangers from all over the world to see the wonderful scenery. He did not pay for transportation simply, as the main object was the privilege of sight-seeing. The management must be presumed to have known that the eyes of its *358 passengers were not fixed upon objects near the track and away from the river, but on the grandeur of the view which they were invited to enjoy. The want of care by either party to the action should be considered in the light of that fact. The evidence, mejudice, warranted the inference drawn by the jury that the defendant was negligent and the plaintiff free from negligence.
What are the facts? The plaintiff was on the Canadian side looking across the river at the scenery on the American side. He was of such huge size that it was obvious at a glance that he could not pass through the narrow space between the car and the trolley pole at the place where the accident occurred without the utmost danger. The double tracks converged somewhat at this point only, which was known to the defendant and the conductor, its agent in charge of the car, but not to the plaintiff. The trolley poles are between the tracks, except for a space of several hundred feet which includes the place of the accident, where they come together and interlock. In the language of the engineer who made the measurements "the easterly rail of the west track crosses the westerly rail of the easterly track," and at this point the trolley poles, which elsewhere are between the tracks, are on the side farthest from the river. The plaintiff gave notice of his intention to pass through said narrow place, which involved a danger known to the conductor but unknown to himself, for the jury could find that it was not obvious even to a vigilant passenger on his first trip over the road. The situation was dangerous at one particular point which he had never seen, though safe over the rest of the road. There was no notice to warn passengers, nor safeguard to protect them. The conductor told the plaintiff to go, and, as he went, kept looking at him. He saw him enter upon the perilous passage, but gave no warning. Knowing the danger to one for whose safety the law commanded him to exercise the highest degree of care, he exercised no care, but let him go on to ruin without lifting his voice to prevent. He was the son of the superintendent of the road and but seventeen or eighteen *359 years of age. What he failed to do, the defendant failed to do and his omission was negligence on its part, as the jury properly found.
The plaintiff exercised some care, for he notified the conductor of what he was going to do and was told to do it. The circumstances made this an assurance of safety, upon which he had a right to rely. Why did he speak to the conductor except to learn whether it was safe to then and there change his seat, and why did the conductor tell him to go and take the other seat unless he intended to assure him it was safe to do so? What was the running board for, if not for the use of passengers? What he did was not dangerous except under the peculiar facts of which he was ignorant, but which the conductor knew or should have known. People were permitted to stand on the running board at all other points on the road and to ride thereon at will.
Is it negligence, as matter of law, for a passenger to do what the conductor tells him to, especially when he looks at him in silence while he does it? Could not the jury find from the evidence that the plaintiff, under the circumstances, was not bound at the peril of his life to observe the precise situation of a single trolley pole with reference to the track and to measure with exactness its distance from the moving car at one particular point, differing from all others, when he had paid the defendant for the privilege of witnessing from an observation car a grand sight, in the opposite direction from the pole and had received from its conductor an assurance of safety? The situation and surrounding circumstances, what the conductor said and did and the right of the plaintiff to rely thereon, were some evidence on the question of contributory negligence, which, therefore, was for the jury. I do not quarrel with the law of my learned brother who has written so ably for the court, but I deny that it applies to this case and invoke the principle that it is the duty of common carriers to warn their passengers of a danger of their own creation, which, while it could be seen, the passenger was not bound by law to see after an assurance of safety had *360 been given by the conductor in charge. The rule of "utmost care" made for the protection of passengers should not be relaxed, for the safety of the citizen is the highest concern of the state.
I vote for affirmance.
CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., concur with WILLARD BARTLETT, J.; VANN, J., reads dissenting opinion; HISCOCK, J., not sitting; GRAY, J., absent.
Judgment reversed, etc.