95 Pa. Super. 570 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1929
Submitted March 13, 1929. Plaintiff got a verdict in an action of trespass. The court below entered judgment non obstante veredicto in favor of the defendant. A review of the evidence, in the light most favorable to plaintiff, fails to convince us that the court erred.
Plaintiff, a passenger on defendant's railroad from Philadelphia to Phoenixville, her home, arrived at her destination about 5:56 o'clock in the evening of October 30, 1925, in a snowstorm. It had snowed continuously since 7:45 o'clock in the morning, and did not stop until several hours after her arrival. The temperature had begun to fall, so that at or about the time her train reached Phoenixville, it was freezing weather. The station platform, which bounded the station on two sides, east and north, was covered or *572 protected by the roof of the building, but several inches of snow had fallen or been blown onto it and it was wet and slippery with slush and snow, and in some places small ridges of ice had formed. On her way along or across the north platform to the taxicab stand, plaintiff slipped in the slush and snow, and fell, injuring her hip.
Unless it was the duty of the railroad company to keep its station platform free and clear of snow during the snowstorm, it was not guilty of any negligence. We do not understand that the law has laid so heavy a burden on it. Within a reasonable time after the snow stops falling it must clear its station platforms sufficiently to permit its passengers to arrive, get on and off the train, and leave the premises with due regard to their safety but to keep the platforms free and clear of snow in the midst of a snowstorm would be a practical impossibility, and the law does not require it. The obligation of the railroad company to keep the steps and platform of its cars free of slush, snow and ice is at least equal to that relating to its station platforms; yet our Supreme Court said in Sutton v. Penna. R.R. Co.,
While plaintiff testified that after she had fallen she could feel ridges on the platform, she admitted that she had not fallen on, or because of, the ridges, but had slipped on the surface of the platform, due to the snow which had fallen there and become slushy and slippery. The same result might have occurred if a force of men had been clearing the snow at intervals all day; for it is not practicable to prevent a wooden platform from becoming wet and slippery during a snowstorm, especially if it is a wet, slushy snow, with a lowering temperature. As the court below well said: "The temperature dropped below the freezing point shortly before the accident, and the slightest presence of snow or the thinnest layer of ice might and probably would have been quite as slippery, and even more so than where the snow reached to a greater height." *574
The uncertainty of weather conditions during and immediately following a snowstorm in this locality and the impracticability of keeping an exposed station platform absolutely clear of snow during a snowstorm are sufficient to justify a holding that the defendant company was not negligent in the circumstances here present and not liable to respond in damages for the plaintiff's regrettable accident.
The judgment is affirmed.