Hines v. Boston Elevated Railway Co.

Hammond, J.

At the time the plaintiff and her mother and young brother entered the car, which was the second or third car of the train, it “ was somewhat crowded,-but there was room enough for the plaintiff’s mother to sit down and for . . . [two adult persons] to sit down next to her, then there was just room enough to put the boy on the end of the seat next to the centre door. By that time the seats were crowded. After the plaintiff’s companions were seated, the plaintiff stood in front of the boy (and held him right there until the crowd commenced to come in). His left hand was toward the centre door, that is, he was *348toward the rear of the train from the centre door, and at that time there were not many passengers standing in the car, although there were some. . . . From the time the plaintiff boarded the train until it reached Haymarket Square, she stood right near the rear of the centre door through which she entered the car, but at no time did she have hold of a strap. As the train proceeded toward Haymarket Square, passengers got in at the first stations and the car filled up gradually, although the plaintiff noticed nothing unusual about the number of people in the car until she got to Haymarket Square. At Haymarket Square there were a large number of people on the platform, as there had been at each station.at which the train stopped, but when the train reached Haymarket Square there was not much spare room in the car in which the plaintiff was riding. When the plaintiff took her position near the rear end of the centre door, she was standing in the main aisle of the car in front of the very end of the seat which runs alongside of the car, reaching over the seat, holding on to the round rod that is at the side of the door. This rod is a perpendicular wooden rod about an inch or an inch and a half in diameter, with iron braces. This the plaintiff grasped with her right hand, and stood in this position from the time she boarded the train until it stopped at Hay-market Square, and the door near which she was standing was opened.”

As to the accident the plaintiff testified that upon arriving at Haymarket Square “ they opened the door to let passengers on, and they were getting on as quick as possible, and then the guard took them by the armful and pushed them in on top of the others — just took them and pushed them in. . . . The car was all crowded at that time.” She further testified that she “ should judge ” that as many as fifteen people came by her as she was standing at the door with her hand upon the rod. In answer to the question as to the effect of the pushing upon her, she said: “ Somebody first leaned on my back and then on my arm, and then I slipped, and I put my hand to protect the child, and then the door was shut; I had my hand on the iron rod, and when they pushed on me, my hand slipped and went in there (indicating), and I held my hand there for protection, and it was then that they banged the door.” She also testified that the *349place where she placed her hand as above indicated was “ the jamb of the door,” and that “ the handful that he pushed in front of me was what jarred my hand loose.” When the door was “ banged ” to by the guard, one of the fingers of her right hand was injured, “ right from the nail above the first joint.”

Passing over the question of the plaintiff’s due care, we see in all this no evidence of negligence of the defendant. The accident occurred at about eight o’clock on a summer evening, and it is apparent that a great many people were at the various stations; and, while a reasonable time should be given to passengers within which to board the train, yet it is proper to urge them. We do not think that the guard whose business it was to close the door could have reasonably anticipated that the hasty entrance of the passengers would result in any harm to the plaintiff. Nor was the act of shutting the door a negligent act. He saw that all the passengers were in, and he had no reason to anticipate that any passenger already in would place a hand on the jamb of the door. Only about half an inch of the end of one of the plaintiff’s fingers was there, and it is not shown that the guard saw or ought to have seen it. It was his duty to shut the door as soon as practicable. The case differs widely from Carroll v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 186 Mass. 97. In that case the attention of the conductor had been attracted to the plaintiff because he had been talking with him only a moment before the accident, was close to him, and must have seen him in the doorway. It was said in that case that “ the jury were warranted in finding that the conductor knew, or, if he had exercised due care would have known, that the plaintiff’s thumb was in the slot. There was evidence that he was standing facing the plaintiff, not more than twelve inches away from him, and that the plaintiff’s hand was about opposite his face.” In that case the accident occurred upon an ordinary electric street car, and on that account it was said in the opinion that “ the custom which exists in England of having the doors of railway carriages on steam railroads shut by the guard from the outside just before the train starts, makes the English cases relied on by the defendant of no value here.”

But it is manifest that the English cases have a material bearing as to the law to be applied to the present case. See among *350others, Maddox v. London, Chatham & Dover Railway, 38 L. T. R. (N. S.) 458; Richardson v. Metropolitan Railway, L. R. 3 C. P. 374, n.; Metropolitan Railway v. Jackson, 3 App. Cas. 193.

Judgment for the defendant.