Morgan v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.

Hooker, J.

(dissenting). That one who disregards the rules of a railroad company so far as to voluntarily ride upon the platform of a passenger coach, in face of the well-known and generally recognized danger of so doing, assumes the attendant risks, is so well established by the authorities in this country that counsel do not appear to question-the proposition. They say in their brief that “ in the case at bar we are willing to admit that, if there was standing room in the car, plaintiff’s standing upon the platform was prima facie negligence, and, if no circumstances had been shown which overcame that presumption, then a verdict should have been directed by the trial judge.” They claim that the rule does not apply because the circumstances show that their client did not so ride, but was there from necessity.

Two reasons are given for his going into a place of dan*632ger: (1) He found no vacant seat in. the car. (2) The air was warm and vitiated from the breathing of the passengers, and he felt faintness and suffocation.

The rule of law is succinctly stated in 2 Wood on Railroads, § 308, to the effect that railroads are liable when the injured passenger is compelled to ride upon the platform, but not where he is unnecessarily riding there. The cases there cited support the rule. 4 Elliott on Railroads, § 1630.

It has been suggested in our consideration of this case that section 6303 of our Compiled Laws is a complete answer to the defendant’s claim that the plaintiff was negligent in riding on the platform. It reads as follows:

“(6303) Sec. 2. In case any passenger on any such road shall be killed or injured while on the platform of a car, or while in or on any baggage or freight car in violation of the printed regulations of the company, posted up at the time in a conspicuous place inside its passenger cars then in the train, such company shall not be liable for the injury, if the injury be occasioned by the person being improperly on such platform or within such baggage or freight car, or after having been notified by the conductor or any other person having charge of any train, that such person is not in the proper place: Provided, said company at the time furnished room and seats inside its passenger cars sufficient for the proper accommodation of its passengers.”

The case of Willis v. Railroad Co., 34 N. Y. 675, is cited as an authority for a construction of this statute (which is similar to the New York statute), to the effect that under this statute, inasmuch as it provides that one injured while riding on a platform cannot recover, provided he could háve found a seat in the car, the inverse of this must follow, i. e., that if he could not find a seat in the car he could go upon the platform at the risk of the company. We doubt if that case is authority for such a proposition, and, if it were, it should not, in our opinion, be followed. We have frequently shown the danger of extending statutes by indulging in such inferences, especi*633ally upon cases that have been discredited, as that case has. It cannot be said that we took that statute with the construction placed upon it by that case, for it was a part of our law long before that case was decided. See 1 Comp. Laws 1857, § 1988. Moreover, the concession ■quoted from plaintiff’s brief, and the failure to make such claim, indicate that plaintiff’s own counsel do not care to contend for such a construction. It is doubtful if the railroad laws of any State in the Union fail to contain a similar statute, and in few, if any, of them has it been permitted to affect the general rule as to contributory negligence above quoted.

Counsel’s admission, then, relieves us from discussing ■the proposition that the failure to find a seat absolved the plaintiff from the ordinary consequences of voluntarily riding on the platform. That fact created no necessity for his doing so. We have nothing left to consider but the ■condition of the car.

It is not claimed that there was not standing room in the coach, and the evidence shows that the plaintiff had ■only a couple of miles or so to ride before the train would reach a station, at which the crowded condition would be measurably relieved, and he testified that he expected that lie could then get a seat, when he entered the car and found all seats occupied. The plaintiff stood near a door, which was shut, according to his testimony. He did not make known his discomfort to the conductor who took up his ticket, nor to the passengers, some of whom were his acquaintances, and ask them to raise the windows. He did not open the door a few inches, and stand with his face to the opening, or throw the door wide open,* and thus ventilate the car. He was acquainted with the road, had only six miles or thereabouts to go from Hillsdale to North Adams, had gone four miles, expected a seat when two miles more should have been traveled, but opened the door and went out. A fair statement is that he felt the need of better air, and that he went into a place, of danger to get it, without any attempt to have the air in the car *634changed, or to get relief in any other way, or to endure a few minutes longer, rather than to incur hazard to his life. Doubtless, circumstances might arise which would make it proper to leave a dangerous place for one less dangerous, but there is nothing to show that he was in danger of anything serious in the car, yet he jeopardized his life to escape a comparatively slight discomfort.

In Quinn v. Railroad Co., 51 Ill. 495, the court said:

“This brief statement of the facts, about which there is no controversy, shows there is no ground whatever for maintaining this action. It was the negligence of the deceased, not that of the railway company, which caused his death. He was chargeable with extreme carelessness, and we cannot see on what grounds' any material negligence can be attributed to the company. He had voluntarily taken a dangerous .position which resulted in his death, and there is no reason why the-company should be made to pay damages therefor. Admitting, however, as claimed by appellant’s counsel, that the conductor should have advised the deceased to, enter the car, at least while paying his fare, his failure to-do so was as nothing when compared with the gross negligence of the deceased. The death of the unfortunate man can be attributed only to his own recklessness. It is urged, however, that this question should have been left to the jury. The practice adopted by the court cannot be safely followed in many cases. Whenever there is evidence tending to prove the issue, the plaintiff has a right, to take the verdict of a jury. But if this had gone to the jury, and they had found for the plaintiff, the court should have set aside their verdict, or, if it had refused to-do so, it would have been set aside by this court.”

In Camden, etc., R. Co. v. Hoosey, 99 Pa. St. 492, the court said:

“Assuming for the present that the company was justly chargeable with negligence resulting in injury to the plaintiff, and that under the circumstances he was not guilty of contributory negligence in passing from car to car in search of a seat while the train was in rapid motion, can it be pretended that it would not be gross negligence in him to voluntarily take a position near the outer edge-of the platform and remain there until, by an ordinary jolt *635of the car, he lost his equilibrium and was thrown off ? * * * He was not only in a position of known danger, but was there voluntarily and in disregard of the rules of the company. There is nothing in the testimony from which a jury would be justified in coming to any other conclusion.”

In Worthington v. Railroad Co., 64 Vt. 107, the court said:

“ Negligence becomes a question of law when the facts or circumstances are so decisive one way or the other as to leave no reasonable doubt—no room for opposing inferences. It is, as a matter of law, prima facie negligence for a passenger to be riding on the platform or step of a rapidly moving steam car. The fact that all the seats in the car were occupied, and the aisles were so crowded that the position of plaintiff was one of discomfort to himself, and of evident discomfort and annoyance to others, does not excuse him for voluntarily occupying a position on the platform while the train was in motion. His claim is that the passage where he stood after giving up his seat was crowded, that most of those in the vicinity were ladies, that the swaying and jolting of the car was one of discomfort to himself and evident discomfort and annoyance to others, and that in consequence of this he concluded to go to the smoking car; that after taking his position on the platform or step he thought he would stay there a few minutes, and then go back into the car which he had left. Thus it appears that the plaintiff had standing room in the car, which he might have continued to occupy, but which he chose to leave in order to free himself from discomfort and annoyance, and that he remained on the platform or the step in order to obtain temporary relief from that discomfort, intending in a short time to resume his former position in the car, which he might have done. But passengers, especially on excursion trains, must expect more or less discomfort, and must endure it rather than assume positions of danger and hazard not provided for their occupancy, for the purpose of avoiding danger. Necessity alone can warrant the assumption of such positions.”

The case of Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Moneyhun, 146 Ind. 147, is closely in point. It was held:

“A passenger [a minor 15 years old, and of average in*636telligence] is, as a matter of law, guilty of contributory negligence in going upon the lowest steps of the car to vomit while the train is in rapid motion, though there was only standing room in the car.”

The plaintiff’s intestate in that case became sick, so that he had to vomit, and went to the platform for that purpose.

In Goodwin v. Railroad, 84 Me. 211, the court said:

‘ ‘ The danger of standing on the narrow platform of a passenger car, while the car is moving with the usual speed of railroad trains, is most conspicuous. No prudent man, no man ordinarily mindful of his conduct and of matters about him, would occupy such a position. The greater the speed of the train, the more imminent the danger in such a place. Thoughtful people instinctively shudder when they see persons taking such risks. Curves are necessarily frequent on railroads in Maine, a fact well known to all, and a fact which makes the riding on the platform of a car most perilous. The knowingly incurring such an imminent, visible peril, the choosing to ride in such a conspicuously dangerous place, must be held by all reasonable people to be recklessness in a high degree. The danger, the chance of injury, is visibly imminent and great. No man of reason can fail to apprehend it. No prudent man would fail to avoid it. There seems to us no room for debate or question upon this proposition. * * *

‘ ‘ Viewing all the circumstances in every light suggested by the counsel, or imaginable by us, we see no escape from the conclusion that Goodwin’s conduct was far below the standard of ordinary prudence, and that such lack of prudence directly caused his injury. Such being our opinion, we must for that reason render judgment accordingly, and set the verdict aside. We have examined every authority cited on both sides, but the above proposition seems to us so clear and simple, so consonant with reason, that we forbear to cite or explain other cases. The curious will find them cited and commented upon in the parallel case of Worthington v. Railroad Co., 64 Vt. 107, published since the above opinion was written and concurred in.”

The Case of Worthington, above cited, contains an elaborate discussion of the questions involved here. Con*637spicuous among them is the mooted question of taking a question of negligence away from the jury, and many cases are cited in support of that duty. We do not quote the case at length, for it can as well be read. The following, however, is so pertinent to the crucial point that we quote:

“But passengers, especially on excursion trains, must expect more or less discomfort, and must endure it, rather * than assume positions of danger and hazard, not provided for their occupancy, for the purpose of avoiding it. Necessity alone can warrant the assumption of such positions. If they are assumed as matter of choice, and they contribute to injury, there can be no recovery. But what woiuld constitute necessity in such cases it is not easy to say. It may, perhaps, be safely said, in a case like this, when nothing is said nor done by those in charge of the train to control nor influence the conduct of the passenger, that the attendant circumstances must be such as not to leave the passenger free to choose; such as to coerce his action and to compel him to assume the position as the best he could do at the time, acting as a careful and prudent man. The testimony in this case did not tend to show any such coercion of circumstances, any such compulsion ; and therefore the case is that the plaintiff was riding as matter of choice, and not of necessity, in a dangerous place, not provided for the occupancy of passengers, which contributed to his injury; hence the court should have directed a verdict against him.”

See, also, the recent case of Rolette v. Railway Co., 91 Minn. 16. It was there said:

“It is undoubtedly the law, as settled in the best considered cases, that the mere fact that there are no seats in the cars does not justify a person in riding on the platform, for, so long as he can find standing room, by reasonable effort, on the inside of the cars, it is his duty to remain there; and also that, where it is unnecessary to stand or ride upon the platform, going there or standing there is such negligence as will prevent a recovery for personal injuries received; and, further, that while it is true that it was a duty incumbent upon the defendant to furnish a seat for the plaintiff, and not merely standing room in the aisle of the car, the mere fact that he was com*638pelled to accept standing room, especially on an excursion train, would not justify him in voluntarily leaving a place of safety, such as the inside of a coach, and going to one of peril—a platform, for instance. It is well known that passengers on excursion trains expect more or less discomfort and must endure it. They are carried at greatly reduced rates; and must anticipate crowded conditions of the coaches. If they assume dangerous places, it must be upon the ground of necessity alone. If such places are assumed as a matter of choice, and injury results, there can be no recovery.”

The Case of Willis, 34 N. Y. 670, is referred to as follows:

“ This case seems to have been tried, upon the part of the plaintiff’s attorney, upon the theory supported by Willis v. Railroad Co., 34 N. Y. 670, that the plaintiff was entitled to a seat, and, if none was furnished him, he was justified in going upon the platform. It is to be noticed that in the Willis Case the accident was caused by an obstruction upon the track, and that in several other cases cited by counsel the accident was caused either by a sudden lurch of the train or by a defective track; a crowded car having nothing to do with the resulting accident. Such cases are not in point, and we expressly decline to adopt the doctrine that, because a seat is not furnished a passenger, he may go into a place of well-known danger, and, if injured, recover damages. The best considered cases, in our judgment, are to the contrary. Worthingtons. Railway Co., 64 Vt. 107; Camden, etc., R. Co. v. Hoosey, 99 Pa. St. 492; Fisher v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va. 183; Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Moneyhun, 146 Ind. 147; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Bisch, 120 Ind. 549; 2 Wood on Railroads, § 308, and note; Beach, Contributory Negligence, § 149.”

The case contains the following comment on the question of proximate cause which we have not felt called upon to decide:

“It seems to be well settled that, even though a passenger is compelled to stand upon the platform of a car by reason of his inability to find sitting or standing room inside, the mere fact that he is injured while so standing is not in itself a cause for action against a railway company, *639for there must be some intervening act attributable to the latter and causing the injury, in order that the passenger can recover. If the accident is caused by the act of plaintiff himself, or by the act of another passenger, the act not being the natural consequence of the company’s negligence, it is not liable.”

The proposition that a ,man who experiences discomfort from the vitiated or overheated atmosphere of passenger trains may, because he feels nausea, go into a place of danger, against the rules of the company, and thereby make the company an insurer of his life, is so unjust that authorities ought not to be required to make it appear. That they are at variance therewith is, however, attested hy the cases cited.

The judgment should be reversed, and no new trial ordered.

Grant, J., concurred with Hooker, J.