Canham v. Rhode Island Co.
Canham v. Rhode Island Co.
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff, administrator on the estate of John S. Canham, deceased, sues in an action on the case for negligence for the benefit of the children of said John S. Canham, for damages arising from the death of said John S. Canham, resulting from his being struck by a car of the defendant company at Silver Hook station, in the town of Warwick, about six P. M., October 20, 1907. The case was tried before a justice of the Superior Court and a jury, October 24-25, 1910. ' The defendant put in no testimony, but at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the justice directed a verdict for the defendant.
The record testimony in brief established the following facts and circumstances in connection with the accident, which is the basis of the suit. About four o’clock in the afternoon of October 20, 1907, John S. Canham, a tailor, *180 left his home on Warwick Neck road, in the town of Warwick, R. I., with two friends and customers, John E. Fitzgerald and John F. O’Brien, both jewelers of Providence. The three men rode on the electric car to Hoxsie station and from this place they walked in the road and across fields to Silver Hook station, stopping on the way to pick chestnuts, and at one time to get two small glasses of beer and a cigar, each, ' and at another time to get two small glasses of beer and a. cigar each. The beer is not shown to have had any intoxicating effect or any effect on the ability of any of the persons mentioned to walk steadily. By the time the men arrived at Silver Hook station it was drizzling rain. Fitzgerald and O’Brien each had an umbrella, but Canham had none. The three waited for a car on the platform adjoining the station house at Silver Hook, which is situated on the east side of the tracks. Mr. Fitzgerald and Mr. O’Brien were bound northerly to Providence and Mr. Canham southerly to Warwick. At this point the electric line of the defendant company runs on a private right of way and there are double tracks running nearly north and south — the rails projecting above the roadbed. North bound cars run on the east track and south bound cars on the west track. The station platform on the east side of the right of way was on the night in question lighted by electricity. On the west side of the track at this point was also a small platform, but no building or overhead covering. The approach to the station from the road was on the east, and this approach was the one commonly used by the public in going to and from the station.
Soon after the three men arrived on the station platform, a south bound car passed .without stopping, although the men, while remaining on the platform, signalled it to stop. The next car to approach the station was traveling southerly about ten minutes later. The two companions of Mr. Canham saw the car when it was rounding the curve about 200 yards north of the station. The three men were then standing near the edge of the platform, about opposite the station door. The approaching car was of the electric *181 suburban type, and carried a “very bright intense” headlight, the rays of which were shed quite vividly on the party at a distance of 100 yards away. When the car appeared on the curve mentioned, Mr. Fitzgerald and Mr. 0 ’Brien each put down his umbrella and from then on .continuously waived it at the car in an endeavor to signal the motorman to stop. While thus signalling Mr. Fitzgerald stepped on to the track and proceeded west as far as the west rail of the north bound track. Mr. O’Brien remained on the west edge of the station platform about opposite the door and a little to the south of Mr. Fitzgerald. Mr. Canham was just south of Mr. O’Brien and he stepped from the station platform down on to the track and proceeded directly across the track to the west. Mr. O’Brien last saw Mr. Canham facing west and walking in that direction across the west rail of the north bound track.
The car did not stop at the station, but went by at a rate estimated at about 20 miles an hour. There was no slackening of the speed of the car and no signalling or warning of any kind from the car as it approached or passed the station. The car did stop at a distance of about six lengths of the car south of the station. After the car stopped Mr. Fitzgerald and Mr. 0 ’Brien saw the motorman of the car running back up the track toward the station and they with him discovered the dead body of Mr. Canham eight to ten feet west of the west rail of the south bound track and about 20 feet south of the south end of the west platform. Mr. Canham’s head was crushed in on the right side.
There is an up-grade going south toward the Silver Hook station from a distance of about 200 feet north of the station on the railroad tracks. The roadbed between the two platforms at this station is about twenty-one feet wide. Each track is five feet one inch wide, and it is six feet between the inner rails of the two tracks.
The plaintiff’s bill sets up nineteen separate exceptions, which fall into groups and may most conveniently be so considered.
*182 Exceptions 1, 2 and 3. The first three exception’s noted are based on the rulings of the trial court excluding evidence of what the motorman said to witness Fitzgerald immediately after the accident. The testimony was that immediately after the accident and the stopping of the car, the motorman of the car ran up the track toward Mr. Fitzgerald and while,yet seven or eight or nine feet from Mr. Fitzgerald and still moving toward him, and very much worked up he made a statement to Mr. Fitzgerald in reference to the accident in which the deceased, Canham figured. The questions asked Mr. Fitzgerald and ruled out' were: “ 100 q. What did he say?” (Exception No. 1). “107 q. Now what did he say to you at that time?” (Exception No. 2). “108 q. Whether or not the statement that he made to you at that time related to the injury to Mr. Canham.” (Exception No. 3.)
The case of Champlin v. Pawcatuck Valley St. Ry. Co., 33 R. I. 572, 576, et seq., is decisive of the questions here involved. That case arose from a collision between an electric car and a horse and wagon. A statement that no one had denied that the railroad was to blame for the accident made by the motorman six or seven minutes after the collision, in reply to a statement -by a bystander that “the railroad company is to blame for this,” was testified to by a bystander and held proper evidence as part of the res gestee. This court says (p. 578): “As a participant in the transaction, would not his statement to that effect made six or seven minutes after the accident, when the car was at a standstill by reason of the accident, and the plaintiff was just being picked up or had just been picked up, be admissible as a part of the res gestee? We think it would.”
Another witness in that case testified as to a further statement in regard to the accident made by the motorman three or four minutes after the accident and still another witness repeated a third statement of the motorman in regard to the accident made just after the accident. It was held that this testimony was all proper as part of the res gestee. This case was fully considered upon a review of the earlier cases in this state and it would be superfluous to cite similar cases from other jurisdictions in view of such recent ruling of this court. The testimony which was ruled out was admissible. Exceptions 1, 2 and 3 are sustained.
Exceptions 12, 13 and 14 were taken to the exclusion of testimony as to whether the defendant company previous to- and at the time of this accident had a rule with reference to-how a motorman should handle his car when approaching Silver Hook station and other stations on the Buttonwoods, line, and if so, what the rule was.
Stevens v. Boston Elevated Ry., 184 Mass. 476 (1904) involves a collision between a carriage and a car on which it was alleged the motorman did not sound his gong. After verdict for the plaintiff the only exception on review was to the admission in evidence of the rules of the company issued to conductors and motormen requiring that a gong be sounded when passing or about to pass a vehicle. The Supreme Judicial Court approved the ruling below and upon this point said (page 478): “The decisions-in different jurisdictions are not entirely harmonious upon the question now raised, but we are of opinion that the weight of authority and of reason tends to support the ruling of the judge in the present case.” . . . “A violation of rules previously adopted by a defendant in reference to the safety of third persons has generally been admitted in evidence as tending to show negligence of the defendant's disobedient servant for which the defendant is liable. The admissibility of such evidence has often been assumed by this court without discussion.”
After stating the analogy between such rules, and ordinances or statutes regulating the running of cars, violations of which by defendant or its servants are always received as evidence, although not conclusive, of defendant's negligence, *190 the opinion proceeds (p. 479): “So a rule made by a corporation for the guidance of its servants in matters affecting the safety of others is made in the performance of a duty, by a party that is called upon to consider methods, and determine how its business shall be conducted. Such a rule, made known to its servants, creates a duty of obedience as between the master and the servant, and disobedience of it by the servant is negligence as between the two. If such disobedience injuriously affects a third person, it is not to be assumed in favor of the master that the negligence was immaterial to the injured, person, and that his rights were not affected by it. Rather ought it to be held an implication that there was a breach of duty towards him, as well as towards the master who prescribed the conduct that he thought necessary or desirable for protection in such cases. Against the proprietor of a business, the methods which he adopts for the protection of others are some evidence of what he thinks necessary or proper to insure their safety.”
The only case to the contrary cited in the opinion last above quoted, and the only case to the contrary which has come to the attention of this court is that of Fonda v. St. Paul City Ry., 71 Minn. 438, at p. 449; and an examination of this latter case shows that no authorities are cited upon this point in support of its decision. The case is criticised in Cincinnati St. Ry. v. Altemeier, 60 Ohio St. 10, 18; and no case is cited to this court in which it had been followed. The doctrine of the case of Stevens v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co., supra, has been followed in numerous cases in other jurisdictions; see Boldt v. San Antonio Traction Co., 148 S. W. 831; Partelow v. Newton & Boston St. Ry. Co., 196 Mass. 24; Burns v. Worcester Consolidated St. Ry., 193 Mass. 63; Crowley v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co., 204 Mass. 241; Larson v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co., 98 N. E. 1048 (1912); Georgia R. R. v. Williams, 74 Ga. 723; Atlanta Consolidated St. Ry. Co. v. Bates, 103 Ga. 333; Lake Shore & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Ward, 35 Ill. App. 423, affirmed in 135 Illl 511; Chicago City Ry. Co. v. Lowitz, 119 Ill. App. 360, affirmed in 218 Ill. 24; *191 Coates v. Ry. Co., 62 Iowa, 486; So. Kan. Ry. Co. v. Pavey, 48 Kan. 452; B. & O. R. R. Co. v. State, 81 Md. 371; Texas Traction Co. v. Hanson, 143 S. W. 214 (1912); Frizzell v. Omaha St. Ry. Co., 124 Fed. 176 (181); Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. v. Lowell, 151 U. S. 209 (217-218); Warner v. B. & O. R. R., 168 U. S. 339 (345).
It should be said that in the many cases where proof of the rules of the defendant and of the violation thereof has been held to be properly admissible as evidence of defendant’s negligence, it is uniformly held that such evidence is not conclusive evidence of negligence, but only to be considered by the jury as evidence in connection with the other evidence in the case. And such evidence has been generally held admissible in cases of injury to third persons as well as to passengers.
The evidence offered and rejected as to the rules of the defendant, which is the subject of exceptions 13 and 14, was admissible and should have been admitted, and those exceptions are sustained.
Exception 19 was taken to the-direction of a verdict for the defendant at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony. This raises the question of the sufficiency of the evidence produced, the chief features of which have already been stated above.
A considerable portion of the plaintiff’s brief has been devoted, in the consideration of this exception, to a discussion of the proof as to due care of the plaintiff’s intestate, in the endeavor to show that the deceased was not, as a matter of law, upon the evidence as it stands, guilty of contributory negligence; and that the defendant was guilty of negligence causing death of Mr. Canham. Inasmuch as certain evidence, which may have a very important bearing upon these questions, as well as upon the application of the doctrine of the last clear chance, was erroneously excluded by the trial court and it becomes necessary to grant a new trial, it would be futile to discuss these questions at length, until this court shall have before it all of the evidence which the *192 parties may see fit to introduce upon such new trial. .It is-sufficient to say that, in our opinion, the record as it stands does not conclusively show, as a matter of law, that the-deceased was guilty of contributory negligence which was the proximate cause of his death, as was decided by the trial judge upon the motion to direct a verdict for the defendant;nor does it show conclusively that the defendant was not-guilty of negligence causing his death; nor does it show conclusively that the doctrine of the last clear chance could have had no application. Sufficient testimony as to the facts of the case does appear in our opinion to require the-defendant to put in its defence to the case; and we are of the opinion that the trial judge erred in directing the verdict for the defendant. Exception 19 is therefore sustained.
Exceptions 1, 2, 3, 7, 10, 13, 14, 16, 17, 19, are sustained; exceptions 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11, 12, 15, 18, are overruled, and the case is remitted to the Superior Court for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Alfred G. Canham, Adm'r v. Rhode Island Company.
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- Published