118 Mo. App. 239 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
Lead Opinion
In 1903 plaintiff was engaged in selling farm lands in Audrain county, Missouri, to pur
The answer is a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence and a special plea of a statute of Iowa, making it negligence per se for any one, not an employee of the company, to step or jump off a moving train.
Plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that the cars were badly lighted and that there was no light at all on the platform from which he stepped off the car. Defendant’s evidence was that the cars were well lighted and that there was a light in the vestibule. Defendant read the following rule of the company, and offered evidence tending to show that it was posted in a conspicuous place in all their passenger cars:
“The Wabash Railroad Company. — Notice to passengers. —Passengers are prohibited from standing on the platforms or within any car or caboose because of danger, They must remain seated until train has stopped at station. “J. Ramsey, Jk., President.
“St. Louis, September 10, 1902.”
Plaintiff, in rebuttal, read the following section of the Iowa Code:
“Sec. 2074. Contract or rule limiting liability. — No contract, receipt, rule or regulation shall exempt any railway corporation engaged in transporting persons or property from the liability of a common carrier, or carrier of passengers, which would exist had no' contract, receipt, rule or regulation been made or entered into.”
The verdict was for the defendant, and plaintiff, after taking the usual steps to preserve his exceptions, appealed in the usual way. »
1. Plaintiff showed that some of the. passengers complained to one of defendant’s brakemen about the light, and offered to prove that the brakeman said they were short of gas. On the objection of defendant, the statement of the brakeman was excluded. This ruling is assigned as error. The declaration of the brakeman
2. The case was tried on the theory that the laws of Iowa governed, and a great deal is said in the briefs about the statute of Iowa, which, in effect, makes it negligence per se for a passenger to step or jump off a moving train. We are not able to see the applicability of this statute to the facts in this case. The statute can only apply where a passenger, of his own volition, steps or jumps off a moving train; it cannot apply where a passenger, as did plaintiff, involuntarily steps off, in the dark, under the impression that he is moving inside a car and not off of it. The learned trial judge took this view and very properly withdrew the statute from the consideration of the jury by an instruction.
3. Plaintiff objected to jhe notice to passengers to remain in their seats as evidence, on the ground that it was an attempt on the part of the company to shift or limit its common-law liability for its own negligence. We do not think the notice had that effect or was introduced for the purpose of excusing the defendant for its own negligence. A railway company carrying passengers, discharges its primary duty to a passenger when he is safely seated in his car; if, after being so seated, he leaves his seat, while the train is in motion, and goes
The defendant’s evidence tends to show that the rules of the company require the doors of the vestibules to be kept closed when the train is running, and that it was the duty of the brakeman • — ■ two of whom were on the train — to see that they were closed, and that they were never opened by the trainmen except when the train stopped at a station for the purpose of discharging and receiving passengers, and as soon as this was done, the rules required the brakeman to close the doors; that the train stopped at Runnels and the vestibule between the second and third or the third and fourth cars was opened and both brakemen were on the platform; that after leaving Runnels and before plaintiff stepped off the train, the conductor went through the train and did not notice that any of the doors were open, and testified that the vestibules were well lighted. The conductor also testified that the vestibule doors could be opened or raised by passengers. The only theory upon which plaintiff can recover is that the doors of the vestibule, through which he stepped off the train, were opened and negligently left open by the defendant’s servants. It was the duty of the trainmen to see that all parts of the train were kept in a reasonably safe condition for the use of passengers and, wThile the company did not invite its passengers to move from one car to another, but on the
4. Plaintiff’s sixth instruction is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that defendant was under no obligation to provide vestibuled trains for its passengers, but having done so it was its duty to maintain them in a reasonably safe condition. The presence of such an appliance on the train is a proclamation by the defendant that it has provided passengers a safe means of passing from one coach to another and an invitation for them to use it as their convenience or neces*249 sity may require. If you find from the evidence that the train upon which plain tiff was a passenger was made up of vestibuled coaches, and that the vestibule between two of said coaches was unlighted, the flooring or trap covering the steps up and open, and the outside doors open, and the steps unguarded; that under such circumstances said vestibule was not reasonably safe for passengers exercising ordinary care to pass through; then said defendant was negligent, and if you find from the evidence that plaintiff while passing through such a vestibule in the exercise of ordinary care was thrown off, fell or walked from said train by reason of said negligence of defendant, your verdict will be for plaintiff.”
This instruction is erroneous in that it told the jury, by providing a vestibuled train, defendant invited its passengers to go from one car to another. Vestibules serve to keep dust and smoke out of the cars, and a train with vestibules is safer than one without them; they also make the passage from one car to another, safer than it would be without them. But their presence is not an invitation to passengers to pass from one car to another, and a passenger going from one car to another on a moving train, when not invited by the company to do so, assumes the risk ordinarily incident to such conduct. In other respects we see no objection to the instruction, and we do not think defendant’s first instruction inconsistent with it, if the objectionable parts of plaintiff’s are stricken out.
Defendant’s second instruction reads as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that while it is true that the defense of contributory negligence must be pleaded and established by defendant, this does not mean that the evidence of such contributory negligence may not be furnished by the plaintiff himself or his witnesses; that what is meant by the defense of contributory negligence is that the plaintiff was guilty of some act which*250 directly contributed to his injury. Although you may find from the evidence in this case that a trap door in the vestibule was left up, yet if you find that it was dark in the vestibule at the time plaintiff attempted to pass through it and he knew that fact or could have known that fact at the time by the use of ordinary care on his part and that the plaintiff attempted to go through said dark place from one car to another, when the train was in a rapid motion and if by reason of the darkness, plaintiff stepped off the train, then plaintiff was guilty of such negligence on his part as to preclude a recovery and you will find for the defendant.”
The act of the defendant in stepping off the train unquestionably contributed to his injury. Under this instruction, the jury might have found him guilty of contributory negligence, however prudent and cautious he may have been in passing from one car to another, and the instruction is clearly erroneous.
Defendant’s eighth and ninth instructions are as follows:
“8. The court instructs the jury that if the said vestibule through which, plaintiff attempted to pass, was lighted up in the usual and ordinary way as practiced by defendant and that plaintiff through absent-mindedness or by carelessly and negligently failing to observe his surroundings, walked off the car platform instead of into the car, then he cannot recover.”
“9. If you further believe or find from the evidence that the said trap door was removed by some passenger and not by defendant nor negligently left open or insecure by the defendant, then defendant is not liable.”
There was no evidence in the record upon which to predicate either of these instructions and they should have been refused. For the same reason plaintiff’s eighth instruction should not have been given. We see no sub
For the errors above noted the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). — 1. It is said in the opinion by the Presiding Judge that: “The only theory upon which the plaintiff could recover is that the doors of the vestibule through which he stepped off the train were opened and left open by the defendant’s servants.” The majority of the court are unable to concur in this doctrine which would relieve the railroad company from its duty to exercise that degree of care which is due from carrier to passenger to the end of providing a reasonably safe conveyance, etc. It is the opinion of the court that the railroad company is not only answerable for the negligent acts of its servants in opening the vestibule doors and permitting the same to so remain after having been opened by them, but it is responsible as well for its failure to exercise a high degree of care to the end that the same are closed and the vestibule reasonably safe for use, even though they are opened by others than the defendant’s servants.
2. We are likewise unable to concur in the views expressed in the criticism of plaintiff’s sixth instruction. Were the question of first impression, and it is not, we would certainly incline to the view and hold that while the railroad company is under no obligation to furnish the extraordinary comfort and convenience of vestibuled cars, yet having furnished such convenient, alluring and inviting appliances as parcel of its train, it thereby impliedly invites its patrons to pass to and fro in such portions of the train as they are entitled to occupy in accordance with the class or grade of transportation held by them, and that a duty arises thereform on the part of the railroad company to exercise the same degree of
“The defendants are under no legal obligation to provide vestibuled trains for their passengers, but, having done so, it was their duty to maintain them in a reasonably safe condition. [Railway Co. v. Glover (Ga.), 18 S. E. 406-414.] The purpose of the vestibuled cars is to add to the comfort, convenience and safety of passengers, more particularly while passing from one car to another. The presence of such an appliance on a train is a proclamation by the company to the passenger that it has provided him a safe means of passing from one car to another, and an invitation for him to use it as his convenience or necessity may require. Whether, having provided vestibuled cars for their passenger trains, it*253 was negligence in the defendants to leave the vestibule connection between two cars without light, and the outside door of the vestibule open without a guard rail or other protection while the train was running rapidly on a dark night, is a question of fact for the jury to determine. And if, upon the facts set out in the complaint, they should find that it was negligence, no court could disturb their finding.” [See also 3 Thompson on Negligence, sec. 2834.]
By reference thereto, it will be observed that plaintiff’s sixth instruction was no doubt copied in part from the language of the opinion in the case quoted. It is sound law, as we understand it, and is approved.
In 2 Shearman & Redfield on Negligence (5 Ed.), sec. 524, a very clear and comprehensive discussion of the law on the subject is had, and in part, it is said:
“The modern vestibule train, by its very construction, invites passengers to cross platforms while the train is in motion; and no presumption of negligence arises from so doing. Passengers have a right to presume that all passenger cars are equally safe; and they ought not to be restricted to any one. Nor can they be required to sit still. The law, which mates liberal allowance for the natural restlessness of dogs, must surely mate equal allowance for the restlessness of the average man. Long train journeys are monotonous and trying, at their best; and active men find it impossible to sit still all the way. No special reason for moving need be assigned. The only question is, whether, under all the circumstances, the act was one natural to a prudent man, exercising his prudence.”
With these observations on the law of the case, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.