Geltzer v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.
Geltzer v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The trial of these cases in the court below resulted in a verdict in favor of Harry Geltzer for $1,500, and for Sam Geltzer the sum of $500. The only point submitted by the defendant, was that under all the evidence in the case the verdict must be for the defendant, and it was refused. The court in banc dismissed the defendant’s motion for judgment non obstante veredicto. These questions are the only ones presented for our consideration in the two assignments of error.
The minor plaintiff was ten years of age when he received the injuries for which this verdict is intended to compensate him, and the testimony adduced in his favor may be fairly summarized as follows: He was on his way from school with other boys, and when passing a street car that was at a standstill, the conductor waved and called to him from the rear platform, and requested him to go to a fruit stand that was in view and get a few bananas for him. The boy received some money from the conductor, procured the bananas, returned to the car and delivered them to the conductor while both were on the rear platform, and while in the act of getting off the car it was quickly started by the motorman, and the
The boy’s testimony is fully corroborated by three eyewitnesses who were within a few feet of the car, and their attention was especially directed to the occurrence. Nor was there any controversy as to the sudden starting of the car. The motorman, called by the defendant, testified that when he got the bell from the conductor, to start the car, he did so as quickly as he could, and when he received the signal of three bells to stop he did so within the length of the car, which was about forty feet in length.
A vigorous defense was made by the defendant, and several witnesses were called who contradicted the plaintiff’s witnesses as to every material fact. The testimony was extremely contradictory, and though the defendant moved for binding instructions in its favor, the learned trial judge felt that it should be submitted to the triers of fact and not be disposed of by the court, as a matter of law. After a review of all the testimony we see nothing in the case which would authorize the court to have taken from the jury, the questions of the defendant’s negligence or lack of proof of it, or to hold, as contended for by the defendant, that the boy was in effect a trespasser, and was not relieved from the consequences of his act by his tender years, or further, to sustain the defendant’s contention that because the boy placed himself in a position of danger to perform a request by the conductor in a matter which was outside the scope of the latter’s employment, the defendant was not liable: West Phila. Pass. Railway Co. v. Gallagher, 108 Pa. 524; Biddle v. Railroad Co., 112 Pa. 551; Phila. Traction Co. v. Orbann, 119 Pa. 37; Barr v. Railway Co., 155 Pa. 170; Levin v. Traction Co., 201 Pa. 58; Trevethan v. R. R., 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 238.
Many authorities have held that it is the duty of the street railway conductor or- motorman to refuse to per
The case is stronger than Sandford v. Railway Co., 153 Pa. 300, where a large verdict was sustained upon' facts more favorable to the company, for the reason' that this boy having been invited by the conductor to a safe place on the car and when he had full charge of the agencies which controlled it, he exercised them in so reckless and negligent a manner as to produce the accident.
The controlling facts in Flower v. Railroad Co., 69 Pa. 210, are so different from the ones before us that the legal principles therein announced are not in conflict with our conclusions. There, while a boy of tender years, at the invitation of a fireman was standing on the water tank of an engine, was thrown off “by some detached cars belonging to the train and without a brakeman, suddenly striking the car behind the tender and driving it forward six to ten feet; . . . the boy was not only where he had no right to be but where he had no right to protection.”
The proximate cause of the accident in the Flower case was from a source independent of, and not known to or controlled by, the employer who had . placed the boy in a hazardous position, while in the present case the boy was in a safe place by invitation of the con
It is a reasonable and necessary rule that a higher degree of care should be exercised towards a child incapable of using discretion commensurate with the perils of the situation, Bransom’s Administrators v. Labrot, 50 Am. Rep. 193; Robinson v. Cone, 54 Am. Dec. 67, and there can be no doubt as to the rule in this state in regard to the duty of a railway company in dealing with a child of tender years when on the platform of a car. In Levin v. Traction Co., 194 Pa. 156, it was said, where “A child five years of age, got upon the step of the platform of the car, and while there, after the car was started was seen by the motorman, who knocked on the window, then lacked on the lower end of the closed side — the side next to the child — when the latter jumped off and fell. This was all the motorman did.” The court below entered a compulsory nonsuit and in reversing
The child being of tender years and in a perilous position, it was the duty of the motorman to use the care that reasonable and prudent persons would exercise under the circumstances in attempting to cause him to alight from the moving car: Trevethan v. Railway Co., 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 238.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.