270 Mass. 264 | Mass. | 1930
This is an action of tort to recover damages for injuries, sustained by the plaintiff while a passenger on one of the defendant’s trains, due to the alleged negligence of its agents and servants. The case was tried to a jury and a verdict was returned for the plaintiff. At
The plaintiff testified that at nine o’clock in the evening of March 6, 1925, as a passenger for hire, he and his friend James J. Pappas took a train of the defendant at Playstead Station for Boston; that it was a very bad night, raining and snowing; that the train consisted of six or seven cars with a combination baggage and smoking car at the rear; that the baggage compartment, which was in the front part of the car, was about eight feet long and separated by a partition from the smoking compartment; that from the smoking compartment there was a door out to the car platform and a door into the baggage room, and there was a door from the baggage room out to the other platform; that he and his friend got on the train through the front platform and door, walked through the baggage compartment into the smoking part of the car and sat in a seat three or four feet from the partition between the compartments; that as the train was coming into the terminal at East Boston he, with Pappas and other passengers, got up, and, holding his valise in his right hand, followed Pappas into the baggage compartment; that the door from the baggage compartment to the front platform was open and Pappas walked through and, having hold of the railing, stood on the car platform; that the plaintiff was about three feet from the door to the outside platform and was just making a motion to take hold of the side of the door partition; that he knew that the car was about to stop and was putting his hand out “to catch hold of the side of the door to protect himself”; that at that minute the train stopped so quickly that he lost his balance and fell forward; that his hands went just across the threshold on the outside platform
James J. Pappas, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that as the train neared the East Boston station it was going faster than it did when it was approaching the other stations; that it “was going a little faster than ordinary”; that as he walked through the baggage compartment and onto the outside platform the train was going fast and jolted back and forth three or four times; that it shook the train a little bit; that the length of each jerk was two or three feet. There was no further evidence as to the force of the jerks or to the effect that any passenger or person on the train, other than the plaintiff, was disturbed, jostled or affected by the jerks.
These circumstances did not warrant the submission to the jury of the issue of the defendant’s negligence. This is not a case to which the doctrine of res ipso loquitur can be applied.
It is common knowledge that the operation of steam railways is necessarily accompanied by some measure of jolts, jerks and lurches, especially observant at crossovers,- and that such jars are inevitable even in the exercise of the highest degree of care by the carrier which is consistent with the reasonable transportation of passengers. There are no facts in evidence which, directly or inferentially, import that the jolts and jerks which caused the fall of the plaintiff were unusual and to such an extent out of the ordinary that the jury reasonably could find that they were due to negligent management of the train. Byron v. Lynn & Boston Railroad, 177 Mass. 303. Weinschenk v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 190 Mass. 250. Foley v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 193 Mass. 332, 335.
We do not find it necessary to decide whether the conduct of the plaintiff in leaving his seat and placing himself in a position where he might be hurt if he should lose his
The motion for a directed verdict for the defendant should have been granted. In accordance with the stipulation it follows that “judgment shall be entered for the defendant.”
So ordered.