Wood v. Phila. Rapid Transit Co.
Wood v. Phila. Rapid Transit Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is an action against a street railway company for personal injuries to one passenger by the act of another. On the afternoon of February 5, 1915, Mrs. Ellie E. Wood boarded one of the defendant’s northbound cars in Fifty:second' street, Philadelphia, at the Market street intersection. It is a transfer point and, as was customary at that hour, a group of some twenty-five people were waiting, and they took passage on the car with Mrs. Wood; while others, including a man who carried an iron pipe on his left shoulder and a canvas bag in his right hand, left the car at the same place. As he alighted from the rear platform, where Mrs. Woo'd and other passengers were entering, the pipe came in contact with her head inflicting a scalp wound; on account of which Mr. and Mrs. Wood brought this suit. Thereafter she died and he prosecuted the case in his own right and as her executor.
There was a sliding door on the side of the car at each end; over that in the rear whs the word “entrance” or “entrance only” and over that in front was the word “exit”; but so far as appears passengers left the car at either end. The conductor was stationed near the back platform, where he could collect the fares and look after the rear door. It was an old-fashioned car with seats along the sides, and was carrying seven or eight passengers as it came to Market street. The man was riding on or near the back platform and there was nothing unusual in his appearance or conduct. The pipe was some five feet long and two and one-fourth inches in diameter, and as carried projected about two feet in front of the
Mrs. Wood was a passenger and entitled to protection as such. “The carrier having impliedly invited the plaintiff to enter the car, was required to exercise the highest degree of care and diligence in protecting her while she was in the act of ascending the steps and going into the body of the car”: Bickley v. Philadelphia & R. Ry. Co., 257 Pa. 369, 376. However, Mrs. Wood was not hurt by any instrumentality connected with the means of transportation; hence, the accident created no presumption against the carrier, and the burden of proof rested upon the plaintiffs: Penna. R. R. Co. v. MacKinney, 124 Pa. 462; Thomas v. Philadelphia & R. Ry. Co., 148 Pa. 180. Street cars are for the use of the people, with as well as without their luggage, and negligence cannot be inferred because a workman is permitted to enter thereon carrying the tools and implements of his trade. And the right so to enter implies the right so to depart. There might be some piece of machinery or instrument so dangerous that to suffer a passenger to take it with him on a street car would be evidence of the company’s negligence, but that cannot be affirmed of the pipe or bar here in question. There is no suggestion that the man indicated any want of care in the manner of taking his luggage onto the car or of placing it while there. Nothing is alleged against him until he shouldered the pipe to leave the platform. No complaint is made down to that point, but it is urged that right there the conductor should have required the man to do something different. Counsel suggest that he should have ordered him to go through the car and out at the front door. If so, he would
Knowingly to suffer the luggage of a passenger to remain so placed in a car as to endanger other passengers is evidence of the carrier’s negligence: Burns v. Penna. R. R. Co., 233 Pa. 304; Diffenderfer v. Penna. R. R. Co., 67 Pa. Superior Ct. 187. And the same rule applies where passengers or trespassers are permitted to engage in a fight upon a car to the terror or danger of other passengers: P., F. W. & C. Ry. Co. v. Hinds, 53 Pa. 512; Pittsburgh & Connellsville Ry. Co. v. Pillow, 76 Pa. 510. But those cases are different from this.
At popular resorts and other like places where hundreds collect at one time to board the cars, it is sometimes necessary to employ assistants to keep back the people and prevent accidents from crowding: Coyle v. Philadelphia & R. Ry. Co., 256 Pa. 496; Kennedy v. Penna. R. R. Co., 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 623. But a transfer point where twenty or thirty people gather to take passage on a street car is not such a place; and none of the cases above cited apply to the facts here presented. The diligence of counsel, supplemented by our own research, has failed to find an analogous case where a recovery has been sustained. Defendant’s request for binding instructions should have been granted, as the evidence failed to disclose negligence on its behalf. That
The first and seventh assignments of error are sustained and thereupon tbe judgment is reversed and is here entered for tbe defendant.
Reference
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- Negligence — Street railway companies — Passengers—Rudeness— Injury to passenger by fellow passenger — Presumptions—Bes ipsa loquitui — Worlcmen carrying tools■ — Negligence of carrier. 1. In the absence of a- fixed duty, negligence cannot be inferred from the failure to do an act in some other way, not shown to be safer. 2. Where the facts are simple and not controverted, their legal value is for the court to determine, 3. Although a carrier, having impliedly invited a passenger to enter its car, is required to exercise the highest degree of care and diligence in protecting him while in the act of ascending the steps and going into the body of the car, yet where the passenger is not hurt by any instrumentality connected with the means of transportation, the accident creates no presumption against the carrier; and in an action for injuries inflicted upon a passenger by a fellow passenger, the burden to prove negligence by the defendant rests upon the plaintiff. 4. Street cars are for the use of the people, with as well as without their luggage, and negligence can not be inferred because a workman is permitted to enter thereon carrying the tools and implements of his trade. And the right so to enter implies the right so to depart. 5. A carrier is required -only to interfere with the voluntary acts of passengers when they constitute a breach of peace or are such as to suggest a reasonable probability that injury will thereby result to others; and a carrier is not liable for injuries sustained by one passenger from the rudeness, crowding, or jostling of another, or for injury from the negligent or wilful act of another, unless given an opportunity to present it. 6. Where in an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by a passenger on a trolley car while entering the car, it appeared that plaintiff was not injured by any of the means of transportation, but was struck by an iron pipe which a workman who was leaving the ear was carrying, and where it further appeared that the safety of the passengers would not have been promoted by requiring the workman to remain on the platform until all of the incoming passengers had entered, or to leave by another door, the case should have been withdrawn from the jury; and the jury having found a verdict for plaintiff, on appeal the judgment was reversed, and judgment for defendant n. o. v. was entered. 7. There may be some piece of machinery or instrument so dangerous that to suffer a passenger to take it with him on a street car would be evidence of the company’s negligence, but that is not this case.