Burgin v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad
Burgin v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad
Opinion of the Court
— We incline to the opinion that the evidence fails to show any defect in the roadway of the defendant company at the point of the accident to plaintiff; but as it seems perfectly clear on the facts that whether there was a defect therein or not the plaintiff would not have
The evidence without conflict showed that plaintiff stepped off the pilot of a moving engine at an unusual place for employees to alight, a place too with which he was unacquainted, and at which he was under no real necessity to alight while the engine was moving, in the dark without using his lantern, which he might have done by changing it from his left arm by means of which he was holding on to the the cross-beam of the pilot to his right hand which was disengaged, to acquaint himself with the situation; that had he so used his lantern he would have discovered a low embankment so close to the track as to render an attempt to alight from the pilot of an engine moving backwards and drawing freight cars after it obviously dangerous and that he was injured in consequence of stepping off a moving train without necessity in the dark at' a dangerous place being unacquainted with the place but having the means readily at hand to advise himself of the danger and negligently failing to resort to them. It is clear that no ordinarily prudent man would have done this thing under the circumstances as the plaintiff did it, and that his doing it contributed proximately to the injuries of which he now complaints.— Thompson v. Boston & Maine R. R. Co., 153 Mass. 391, s. c. 26 N. E. Rep. 1070.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.