St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Beecher

Bunn, C. J.

This is a suit for $15,000 damages to the next of kin for the killing of Rebecca Taclcwell, plaintiff’s -intestate. Verdict and judgment for $1,500, and the defendant railway company appealed.

There is evidence to sustain the allegation that the deceased was killed by the negligent, running and operation of defendant’s train, and there is also evidence of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased which contributed directly to her death. This being true, and there being no question as to the admissibility of testimony offered in evidence, the case turns on the giving and refusing of instructions.

The first instruction given by the trial court at the instance of the plaintiff reads as follows, to-wit: “You are instructed that the defendant corporation is bound to use, in running and operating its trains on its road, the highest degree of care, diligence and skill which a prudent and cautious man would exercise, and which is reasonably consistent with its mode of conveyance and practical operation of its road.” This instruction is not hypothetical in form, but seems to be intended as an assertion of an abstract proposition of law; but, even as an abstract proposition, it is erroneous; for, while it is applicable and proper in the case of a passenger, it cannot be made to apply to the ease of any other than a passenger or one sustaining the relation of a passenger to the railway company. It is in close accord with the direction of this court in the ease of Ry. Co. v. Sweet, 60 Ark. 557, which was a case involving the killing of a passenger.

It is not the law that a railway company, in running and operating its trains, is bound to use the highest degree of care, diligence and skill, generally, for the railroad company owes no such duty to all the world, but only to a class of people, a very limited class in point of numbers, — passengers on its trains, or those sustaining such relation to it.

One of the principal questions in this case is whether or not the deceased, at the time of her death, was a passenger of defendant; and yet the instruction, in effect, was a declaration by the court to the jury that it made no difference whether she was a passenger, a traveler, or trespasser at the time, in so far as the degree of care, skill and diligence to be exercised by the defendant was concerned; for it made no distinction in favor of passengers, or against travelers and trespassers, in this regard.

The evidence showed that deceased, who had been a passenger on defendant's passenger train from Corning to Walnut Ridge depot, had left the train and the depot platform, and was on the railroad track en route, to her residence in the town of Walnut Ridge, when she was run over and killed by the rear coach of said train, while the same was being moved backwards. The trial court, holding, in effect, that by this act she had ceased to be a passenger, gave the following instruction at the instance of the defendant, to-wit: “7. The relation of passenger to the defendant ceased after Mrs. Tackwell was safely discharged from the train at the place of her destination, and after she left the depot platform. If the evidence shows that the employees on the train that killed Mrs. Tackwell were in the ordinary discharge of their duties, and exercised reasonable diligence and precaution, the defendant is not responsible for unavoidable accident to the deceased, and your verdict will be for the defendant.”

The fact that deceased had left the depot platform, and was on the railroad track en route to her home, is undisputed; and she had ceased to be a passenger, under the rule which governs in such eases, and under which the instruction was given.

The error of the first instruction is thus made palpable, and, being radically wrong, its defect is not cured by any other instruction given; for, as in all such cases, it cannot be said certainly which of the instructions influenced the jury in making up their verdict.

Beversed and remanded for a new trial,