Metropolitan Street-railway Co. v. Warren

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The plaintiff in this case claims to have suffered injuries on account of the negligent conduct of the defendant in the operation of one of its streetcars, which she attempted to board. The petition alleges that an open car, with a running-board at its side, stopped for the plaintiff at a place where passengers were usually received; while the car was standing still she stepped upon the running-board with her right foot, and placed her left foot upon the floor of the car; before she had an opportunity to lift her *245right foot from the running-board and place it upon the floor of the car the employees in charge negligently, carelessly and without any warning caused the car to start forward suddenly, swiftly, and with a jerk, and to run around a curve in the track with great speed, thereby throwing plaintiff from the car to the pavement.

On the trial evidence was given in support of the allegations of the petition. The plaintiff herself described the occurrence and stated, among other things, that when she boarded the car she took hold of and held to a stanchion running up from one of the seats, that there was nothing to impede her entrance into the car, and that the car was obliged to move a considerable distance before it came to the curve in the track. The defendant produced no witnesses with knowledge of the accident.

Disregarding many of the allegations of the petition, and much of the evidence, the court directed the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff under the following circumstances:

“If you believe from the preponderance of all the evidence that on or about the 9th day of June, 1890, the Metropolitan Street-railway Company usually stopped its cars for the purpose of receiving and discharging passengers near the intersection of Third street and Minnesota avenue in Kansas City, Kan., and that the plaintiff went to said place for the purpose of boarding one of the trains of cars of said' company, and that one of the trains of cars of said company stopped at said place for the purpose of receiving passengers thereon, and that the plaintiff attempted to board one of the cars of said company at said place •while the same was standing still, and that just as she was in the act of getting up into said car, and while she had one foot on the running-board of said car and one foot on the floor thereof said car was started forward without any warning to the plaintiff, and that she was carried some distance on said car, and as the car was rounding a curve she was thrown from said car, whereby she was injured and by reason of said injuries sustained physical pain or financial loss as *246the direct and proximate result thereof, then you should render a verdict for the plaintiff; unless you further believe from the preponderance of all the evidence that the plaintiff could have avoided the injuries which she received at the time and place in question, by the exercise of reasonable care and prudence on her part, and failed to exercise such reasonable care and prudence for her own safety and thereby directly contributed to the cause which produced her injuries, if any she received at the time and place in question, when, under such circumstances, you should render a verdict for the defendant.”

The plaintiff argues in favor of the correctness of this instruction as if it were designed to express the rule of law relating to the presumption of negligence on the part of a carrier arising from proof of an accident to a passenger. That rule and its limitations, are stated in the case of Railroad Co. v. Burrows, 62 Kan. 89, 61 Pac. 439. It relates to burden of proof, and should not be confused with the question of what constitutes negligence per se. According to that rule, when proof of an accident to a passenger is made a prima facie case of negligence on the part of the carrier is presented, and no more. The defendant is then called upon to explain, but it has- the right to make its explanation from the plaintiff’s own evidence if it can; and if upon that evidence different minds might reach different conclusions respecting the character of the defendant’s conduct the juryt should be allowed to say if a recovery is warranted. The rule is the same in this respect as it is in reference to contributory negligence — a pure matter of defense which may be derived from the plaintiff’s own testimony. The case of Gleeson v. Virginia Mildand R’d Co., 140 U. S. 435, 11 Sup. Ct. 859, 35 L. Ed. 458, quoted in Railroad Co. v. Burrows, supra, is clearly to this effect. In the Glee-son case it was said:

“When he [the plaintiff] proves the occurrence of the accident, the defendant must answer that case from all the circumstances of exculpation, whether disclosed by the one party or the other. They are its matter of *247defense. And it is for the jury to say, in the light of all the testimony, and under the instructions of the court, whether the relation of cause and effect did exist, as claimed by the defense, between the accident and the alleged exonerating circumstances.” (Page 444.)

So here, if the circumstances enumerated in the instruction were found by the jury they still had the right to consider other facts appearing in the proof and to determine from all the evidence whether the defendant exercised the caution the law requires.

' If it be said the evidence, relating to the accident was substantially all one way, the reply- is obvious that the defendant had the right to the opinion of the jury upon the credibility of the plaintiff’s witnesses and the quantity of truth their statements contained. Those witnesses were the plaintiff herself, her sister, and a discharged employee of the defendant. None of them was likely to be biased in favor of the defendant. Their testimony was given fifteen ’ years — lacking a month — after the accident occurred, and upon the first trial of the case. The fact that the plaintiff had a grasp upon a secure support and that there was nothing to hinder or delay her progress was important in estimating the defendant’s care for her safety when starting the car. Remembered through the years, the violence of the jerk, if there was one, and the speed of the car may have loomed large, .while a simple failure of the plaintiff’s strength, causing her to fall off, may have been overlooked. These matters were all eliminated from the case by the instruction quoted, and the jury were deprived of the opportunity Of interpreting •the evidence as a whole in measuring the defendant’s liability.

The instruction referred to advises the jury that if certain enumerated facts are established by the evidence the verdict should be for the plaintiff. One of those facts is the failure to give warning before starting the car. This court knows of no general rule of law im*248posing upon street-car companies the duty of warning passengers who have mounted a standing car -that it is about to proceed. Whether or not a warning was necessary under the circumstances for the protection of the plaintiff in this case was clearly a question for the jury. In other respects this court is unwilling to say that the facts recited in the instruction make a case of negligence per se. In the light of the knowledge common to all men the jury might have concluded the company exercised due care, and had they done so this court could not have vacated the verdict.

(89 Pac. 656.) SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Railroads — Injury to Passenger Negligence a Question of Fact. On the trial of a controversy of the character of the one disclosed by the record in this case it should be left to the jury to say not only what the facts are but whether under all the circumstances the conduct of the defendant was negligent.

Want of care on the part of the plaintiff could not be considered in determining whether the defendant fulfilled its duty toward her; hence the latter part of the instruction does not aid that which precedes it.

The court adheres to the views expressed in the case of Williams v. Railway Co., 68 Kan. 17, 74 Pac. 600, 64 L. R. A. 794, 104 Am. St. Rep. 377. Other questions argued in the briefs and at the bar need not be considered. The judgment of the court of common pleas is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.

All the Justices concurring.