McIlwaine v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co.
McIlwaine v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co.
Opinion of the Court
The errors here assigned are to instructions given the jury in a case where the issue was whether Mrs. Mc-Ilwaine boarded one of appellant’s cars as it made a safety stop, and, when informed by the conductor that the car was going to the barn, started to get off, and while attempting to do so, the car was suddenly started forward, throwing her to the ground, and inflicting the injuries complained of; or, as claimed by appellant, that she recklessly attempted to alight from the car in an improper manner while it was in motion.
The first instruction complained of is this:
“The court instructs you that if you find from the testimony that the plaintiff was notified that the car in question was bound for the barns, and if the plaintiff was led to believe that passengers would not be carried upon the car at that particular time, then it was her duty to alight therefrom, and it was the duty of the defendant company, through its motorman and conductor, to keep the car standing still until the plaintiff would have a reasonable time to alight therefrom.”
It is contended that this instruction is erroneous for two reasons: (1) It assumes the only material fact in the case, and is therefore a comment with respect to a matter of fact; and (2) it is an erroneous statement of the law as applied to the facts.
It is undoubtedly error for a trial court in its instructions to the jury to infringe upon the constitutional mandate that “judges shall not charge juries with respect to matters of fact, nor comment thereon.” It is said this instruction comments upon the only issuable fact in the case, in that it assumes, in saying it was the duty of the defendant “to keep the car standing still,” that the car was standing still when Mrs. Mcllwaine attempted to get off. We hardly think the
The second complaint of this instruction is that it is erroneous in telling the jury that, if the plaintiff was notified that the car was bound for' the barn, it was her duty to immediately alight therefrom. Counsel says, “it was plaintiff’s duty to remain on the car until it was stopped for the purpose of permitting her to alight,” and it was not her duty to immediately alight therefrom when notified it was going to the bam. We do not think the ordinary juror would follow this critical analysis of the language used, or take it to mean other than that, when Mrs. Mcllwaine learned the car was going to the barn, she could not remain thereon as a passenger, but should get off, and while she was getting off, defendant should keep the car standing still.
The second instruction complained of is one in which the court, in giving the jury the measure of damages, said to them they might include “further expenses which may happen in the future by reason of the injuries received.” Standing alone this would be error; but the court gave the jury
Complaint is next made of the court’s refusal to give an instruction requested by appellant. The instruction offered, we think, is a correct statement of the law; but it seems to us the court covered the point in language differing somewhat from that chosen by counsel for appellant, but conveying the same meaning to the jury, and hence we cannot say the refusal was error.
Finally, it is contended Mrs. Mcllwaine was not a passenger, and therefore it was error to hold the appellant to the highest degree of care. Mrs. Mcllwaine boarded the car believing it to be one on which her husband was conductor, intending to pay her fare. We think that, while on the car, she was a passenger so far as imposing a duty upon the appellant, and that this duty continued until she had alighted in safety. The evidence is susceptible of a finding which, in the light of the verdict, must be accepted, that the car stopped at a usual stopping point, and that Mrs. Mcllwaine, in the exercise of due care, got on the platform for the purpose of taking passage. This would make her a passenger, and
Judgment affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Ellis, Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Leslie McIlwaine v. Tacoma Railway & Power Company
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Carriers — Injury to Passengers — Actions — Instructions—Assumption of Facts. An instruction to the effect that, if the jury find that a passenger was notified that a car was going to the barn and passengers would not be carried, it was the duty of the passenger to get off and of the company “to keep the car standing still,” is not an unlawful comment on the facts in that it assumes that the car was standing, a disputed question in issue, where the instructions, construed as a whole, merely meant that it was the duty to keep the car motionless while the passenger was getting off. Same — Instructions—Duty of Passenger. An instruction that it was the duty of a passenger to “immediately alight” upon being informed that the car did not carry passengers and was going to the barn, is not erroneous in that it was her duty to wait until the car stopped. Damages — Personal Injuries — Future Damages — Instructions. An instruction, in an action for personal injuries, that plaintiff was entitled to recover “further expense which may happen in the future by reason of the injuries received” is not prejudicially erroneous, where other instructions were given plainly telling the jury what results they could consider in that connection. Trial — Instructions Already Given. It is not error to refuse a requested instruction that is covered in other language in the general charge. Carriers — Who are Passengers. One who boards a street car stopping at a usual stopping place, intending to pay her fare, is a passenger until she safely alights therefrom, although the car was on the way to the barn and she was notified to get off.