190 Mass. 250 | Mass. | 1906
These were two actions of tort brought to recover damages for personal injuries to the female plaintiff, the wife of the plaintiff in the second suit. At the trial the presiding judge ruled that on the pleadings and evidence the plaintiffs could not recover, and ordered a verdict for the defendant in each case; and the cases are here on the plaintiffs’ exceptions to that ruling. No question, however, was raised as to the pleadings.
There was evidence that on the evening of September 24, 1904, the plaintiffs took a train on the defendant’s road at Atlantic, for the purpose of going to Harrison Square, where
On this testimony, it is at least difficult to say that the female plaintiff was in the exercise of due care. The train had not reached the station, and no call of the station had been made. Trains cannot be run without some jolts, especially in stopping; and this is a matter of common knowledge. She knew that the door was open. There was no evidence that it was fastened back, or that she believed it to be fastened back; and it is generally known that the catches of car doors are not intended to hold them securely against being shut, but only to guard against their being lightly or easily moved. This is all. that she would have had a right to infer even if she had believed or known that the door was held by a catch. It has been said that a passenger in a railroad car who is voluntarily standing when there are plenty of vacant seats cannot recover for an accident which it is manifest would not have happened to him if he had been sitting down. Farnon v. Boston Albany Railroad, 180 Mass. 212,
But however this may be, we do not think that there was any evidence of negligence in the defendant. The jolt of the car was described as an unusual one; but it does not appear to have been due to any defect in track or car, or to any carelessness in the running of the train. Timms v. Old Colony Street Railway, 183 Mass. 193. Byron v. Lynn Boston Railroad, 177 Mass. 303. Nor could it be found that the defendant was careless in the management of the door. Apparently it had been left open by reason of the closeness of the air in the car; and the defendant was not bound to keep it from closing at a time when it was not called upon to anticipate that passengers would be standing upon the threshold or the platform. Nor could it be inferred from the mere closing of the door either that there was a defective fastening or that there had been negligence in putting the door on the catch, for the reasons stated in speaking of the plaintiff’s own care. It is not a case to which the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur can be applied, as was done in White v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 144 Mass. 404. It does not appear that this door worked by a spring or catch, as did the window in Faulkner v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 187 Mass. 254. Nor is there anything to help these plaintiffs in Gee v. Metropolitan Railway, L. R. 8 Q. B. 161, in which a closed door opened when it ought not to have done so.
There was no evidence that the injuries of Mrs. Weinschenk were due to any negligence of the defendant.
Exceptions overruled.