Bilotta v. Media, Middleton, Aston & Chester Electric Railway Co.
Bilotta v. Media, Middleton, Aston & Chester Electric Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plaintiff boarded a car of the defendant company at Chester to go to a point on its Media line beyond the intersection at Folsom. It so happened that about an hour before, a large tree, uprooted by a storm, had fallen across the track and the public road alongside, at a point between Chester and Folsom, temporarily preventing through travel in the same car. To meet conditions existing while the work of removal was going on, the company ran its cars from Chester to the place of obstruction, then back again to Chester; and in the same way ran the cars from Folsom to the place of obstruction, and then back, permitting an exchange and transfer of passengers at the place of interruption. The fallen tree had stood north of the track, and beyond two telephone lines, one of which belonged to the defendant company and the other to an independent company. In its fall the tree carried the wires of these lines down with it and across the trolley wire. Some of the wires thus thrown down were broken, some were tangled in the branches of the trees, and all to greater or less extent were carried over the whole space covered by the debris. When the car in which the plaintiff was traveling had reached the point of obstruction, plaintiff alighted, and while attempting to cross over to where the other car was, or
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Bilotta v. Media, Middleton, Aston & Chester Electric Railway Company
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Negligence — Street railways — Notice of danger — Individual peculiarity of plaintiff. Where the inability of a party injured owing to some individual peculiarity of his, unknown to the defendant, to understand what to the ordinary person would be a sufficient warning, is the. immediate and proximate cause of his injury, the accident is to be referred to the party's misfortune, and not to the negligence of the defendant simply because of failure to give effectual warning. In an action against a street railway company to recover damages for personal injuries it appeared that before the plaintiff was injured a tree had fallen across defendant’s tracks, and had dragged down with it a number of telephone wires. These wires had become tangled in the branches, and some of them had become charged from contact with the trolley wires. Cars were run up from both directions to the tree, and the passengers were transferred from one car to the other so as to make the continuous journey. The plaintiff, an Italian, who could not speak English, was warned by»the motorman on the car on which he was a passenger to remain seated in the car until the other car had arrived, and that it was dangerous to cross over. Plaintiff left the car and started to cross over, when he was warned by the defendant’s superintendent, both by words and movements, to stay back. He disregarded the warning and came in contact with a wire and was injured. Defendant presented this point: “ There was no obligation on the part of the defendant company to warn the plaintiff in Italian, and if the jury find that the warning was such as to indicate danger ahead to any man of ordinary intelligence, plaintiff cannot recover.” This point was answered as follows: “We will say that if from any motion or act of the defendant, he, the plaintiff, understood the warning, then he cannot recover. But we cannot say that if they warned him in a language that he did not understand, and that he did not heed it, that it would be contributory negligence for him to pay no attention to it; but we do say to you that the point is affirmed if he understood it, though he might not have understood the language, if he understood the motions and directions not to go on, understood that they were dangerous.” Held, (1) that the answer to the point was in effect a rejection; (2) that the point called for an unqualified affirmance with respect both to the question of the negligence of the defendant, and to the contributory negligence of the plaintiff.