131 Wis. 335 | Wis. | 1907
Counsel for appellant stated this as the proposition presented by the record for decision:
“If a railroad company stops a passenger train at a railroad crossing as the train approaches a railroad station, in the nighttime, after the station has been called, without notice to*339 the passengers that the stop is not for the station, is such conduct of the company negligent as to a passenger who is entirely familiar with local conditions ?”
We cannot agree with counsel that the quoted language accurately covers the matter to be decided. It omits several circumstances which may well have had weight in the mind-of the trial court in submitting the cause to the jury, and in the minds of the latter in reaching a conclusion. Some of such circumstances are the following: The station was called by the brakeman as he opened the front door of the car. He closed the door thereafter as if nothing more were to be done on his part before the time for passengers to alight. It was raining hard at the time, suggesting reasonably the closing of the door by the brakeman even though the interval between the calling of the station and the stopping of the train for passengers to alight might be brief. It was a very dark night — so dark that a person could not observe with reasonable distinctness surrounding objects outside the train or the ground at the side of the track. The arc lights which were customarily burning were not in service. There was no proof that the calling of the station was ordinarily followed by two stops, one for the crossing and the other for the station. The attitude of other passengers in the car than Mr. Wolf reasonably suggested to him the thought that the stop was at the station. There was liability, reasonably, for one circumstanced as Mr. Wolf was to be diverted in mind from attention to the fact that it was necessary to stop at the crossing before stopping at ,-the station. We must face the situation pictured by counsel’s proposition enlarged by at least all the circumstances mentioned, and from that viewpoint determine whether there was a jury question as to negligence on the part of appellant, and another as to contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.
It is suggested that the negligence alleged was not established, in that there was’ no proof that the brakeman left the
We may well say in passing, to emphasize tbe foregoing,
It is suggested that Mr. Wolf must have stepped off the train, knowing that he was not at the station, with a view of taking a short way to his home, which was commonly done by persons living in that part of the city wherein he resided, which was west of the crossing; that there is no other reasonable explanation of his movements, since he must have known from his familiarity with local conditions that when the train .stopped it was not at the station. There aré, it seems, two infirmities in that view: First, the improbability that Mr. Wolf stepped off the train blindly into the darkness, knowing as he must that if the train was not at the station it was liable to be on the trestle, certainly is sufficient to preclude taking the case from the jury in favor of the defendant in respect thereto. Secondly, notwithstanding Mr. Wolf was familiar with local conditions and might have known that the first stopping of the train was for the crossing, he was not bound under all the circumstances to remember all such conditions and the necessity for the first stop, at his peril. If his mind was by any adequate cause momentarily diverted so that the negligence of the appellant became operative while he was taking the course which in his condition of mind the conduct of appellant invited, he was not guilty of contributory negligence. The rule last stated has been often proclaiiped by this court and quite decisively in the following language, quoted by respondent’s counsel to our attention, from Collins v. Janesville, 111 Wis. 348, 87 N. W. 241, 1087:
“Some courts have held that if a person knows of a dangerous defect in a sidewalk he is bound at his peril to remember it [citing authorities]. But this court, in harmony with the weight of authority, holds to the more reasonable and humane*342 rule that a person may forget the existence of a defect in a street or sidewalk and thereby receive a personal injury, and yet be in the exercise of ordinary care.”
True, what a person knows which may affect his personal safety he is presumed to remember in the absence of. any circumstance reasonably accounting for his forgetfulness in respect to the matter, but it is so common for one to momentarily forget such a matter, because of his mind being for the time diverted therefrom, that rather slight circumstances have been considered sufficient to carry the question to the jury of whether failure to remember in the given case was consistent with ordinary care.
It was said in Collins v. Janesville, supra, in respect to. the nature of the presumption that what one knows regarding a condition liable to affect his personal safety he is presumed to have in mind and to be wanting in ordinary care in failing to. avoid the danger, that “the presumption is rebuttable and gives way so readily to explanatory circumstances that any reasonable excuse for the forgetfulness is sufficient to carry the case to the jury on the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence.”
The following precedents fully illustrate the application of" the doctrine stated: In Wheeler v. Westport, 30 Wis. 392, a physician on the way to visit a patient in the nighttime, his mind being diverted by reason of conversation with a companion, momentarily forgetting a dangerous place in the highway with which he was perfectly familiar, drove into it and' was injured. In Crites v. New Richmond, 98 Wis. 55, 73 N. W. 322, the plaintiff stepped into a hole in the sidewalk with which he was familiar, his mind being momentarily diverted by a call to him from a person on the opposite side of the street. In Cumisky v. Kenosha, 87 Wis. 286, 58 N. W. 395, the plaintiff was injured by reason of a dangerous ridge of ice on a sidewalk. She knew of the obstruction and had passed over it but a short time before. The only explanation
Applying the foregoing to the facts here it is considered that the darkness of the night, the rain, the absence of the street lights, the sudden call of the station, the movement of the brakeman immediately followed by the stopping of the train, and the movements of other passengers than Mr. Wolf, indicating a purpose to immediately leave the train, were amply sufficient to carry the case to the jury on the question not only of whether the deceased knew where the car was, but whether he ought to have known of it in the exercise of ordinary care. It is within reasonable probability that he was thrown off his guard without fault on his part, amounting to a want of ordinary care, by such circumstances, and that the suggestion to alight held out by the call for the station and the stopping of the train was the producing cause of the mischief.
It is further contended that since there was a light in the depot and two incandescent lights outside, as was the custom, it was contributory fault on the part of the deceased in not observing such a conspicuous object before he stepped off the train; that the absence of the customary depot lights, had the deceased been in the exercise of ordinary care, would have efficiently suggested to him that the train was not at the sta
When he arrived at such point it is the opinion of the court upon the evidence that he was not, as a matter of law, bound at his peril of being successfully charged with contributory negligence, to hesitate and look for the depot, or observe its absence before taking the next step. The customary interval between the stopping and' starting of a train at small stations is often very short. Again, customarily passengers are expected to promptly leave the train upon its stopping at a station so as not to obstruct the way for those who wish to board it. Further, the deceased was not bound to suppose that his car was located in front of or in any closer proximity to the
“Having been induced by the conduct of the company’s employees to reasonably believe that the train was at the station, lie was authorized to believe that he could descend the step to the ground with safety. The name of the station having been announced it was natural that the passengers destined” therefor “would commence to leave the train as soon as it was brought to a full stop. . . . The train having been stopped at an unusual place, short of the station, it was the duty of those in charge to use all due precaution to protect the passengers from injury, especially when it is dark and the train is stopped on a trestle or other place of danger.”
Of course, if the situation at the depot in the nighttime was customarily, and on the night in question, such that upon the train arriving at the proper place for passengers to alight the depot lights would necessarily have challenged Mr. Wolf’s attention, and the absence thereof as he was about to take the last step in all reasonable probability would necessarily have challenged his attention, and would have caused him to hesitate and efficiently investigate, had he been in the exercise of ordinary care, the case would be with the appellant, but it is the opinion of the court in view of all the circumstances that lie may have been in the exercise of such care and yet have proceeded from his seat to and inclusive of the fatal step without looking for the station lights or his attention being attracted efficiently to the absence thereof. Having been thrown -off his guard so that when he started to leave the train he had
Counsel for appellant cites to our attention East Tenn., Va. & Ga. R. Co. v. Holmes, 97 Ala. 332, 12 South. 286, as substantially on all-fours with the case in hand. The rule of that case is stated thus:
“Although a passenger may reasonably conclude that he has reached his destination when the name of the station is called and the train comes to a stop, yet, if the circumstances would indicate to a prudent person that the proper stopping place had not been reached, and he voluntarily steps from a moving train in the darkness, he is guilty of such contributory negligence as will defeat a recovery for injuries sustained.”
That statement seems sufficient without comment to show that the case comes far short of fitting the situation we have to deal with. True, there is language in the opinion which would support appellant’s view if applied here without keeping in view the doctrine of excusable forgetfulness and the circumstance in the cited case that after the train stopped it resumed its course before the passenger left the car, thereby challenging his attention as to the absence, of indications of a station. Of course, while legal principles in cases of this sort do not change or bend to fit different situations, the result to which they lead depends upon the facts of the particular case. Often the presence or absence of some particular circumstance turns the scale.
We will not further discuss the case. We have sufficiently given the reasons why, in the opinion of the court, the ques
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.