Anderson v. Yellow Cab Co.

191 N.W. 748, 179 Wis. 300, 31 A.L.R. 1197, 1923 Wisc. LEXIS 32
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 191 N.W. 748 (Anderson v. Yellow Cab Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Yellow Cab Co., 191 N.W. 748, 179 Wis. 300, 31 A.L.R. 1197, 1923 Wisc. LEXIS 32 (Wis. 1923).

Opinion

Doerfler, J.

The jury, among other things, was instructed as to the degree of care required by the defendant in the operation of its cab at the time and place in question as follows:

“The duty which the defendant, as a common carrier, owes to a passenger requires the defendant’s employees, for the safety of its passengers, in the operation of its cars to exercise the highest degree of care reasonably to be expected from human vigilance and foresight in view of the mode and character of the conveyance adopted and consistent with the practical prosecution of its business.”

To this instruction defendant duly excepted, it being contended that the degree of care required by the driver of the cab is not that applicable to a common carrier, and that the [303]*303defendant in the instant case was not a common carrier, and that it was merely liable for injuries sustained as a result of the failure to exercise ordinary care. In other words, defendant contended that the degree of care required of its driver was that applicable to one hiring a private conveyance for a specific purpose from a garage or a livery stable.

The instruction given by the trial court is substantially in conformity with what has been laid down by the rule adopted in Ferguson v. Truax, 132 Wis. 478, 110 N. W. 395, 111 N. W. 657, 112 N. W. 513, and Oberndorfer v. Pabst, 100 Wis. 505, 76 N. W. 338, and such rule is the rule in Wisconsin as applicable to the degree of care required of common carriers.' The Ferguson. Case is one involving the liability of a proprietor: of a passenger elevator to a passenger, and in that case the following statement from 1 Hutchinson, Carriers (3d ed.) sec. 100, is quoted with approval:

“The safety and lives of those who avail themselves of this means of carriage must of necessity be intrusted in a great, measure to the care of those who control and operate the cars. The law, therefore, justly holds that, while the owners of passenger elevators are not insurers of the safety of their passengers, they are bound to exercise in their behalf the highest degree of skill and foresight, or, as some courts have expressed it, the utmost human care and foresight consistent with the efficient use and operation of the means of conveyance employed.”

The language thus quoted from Hutchinson is apt, and is applicable to the instant case. The rule requiring the high degree of care referred to is based upon a consideration of public policy designed to protect the lives and limbs of passengers upon such conveyances.

Whether in a strictly technical sense the defendant can be regarded as a common carrier of passengers or not,' the defendant was bound to use reasonable' care according to [304]*304the nature of the 'contract, and in view of the nature of the business and the peril to life and limb of the passengers likely to arise from an accident, this reasonable care should be defined as the highest degree of care consistekt with the 'proper transaction of the business. Hinds v. Steers, 209 Mass. 442, 95 N. E. 844.

In Gardner v. Boston E. R. Co. 204 Mass. 213, 90 N. E. 534, it is said:

“A common carrier of passengers either by rail or by water has so complete a control and the consequences of negligence on his' part may be so serious that he is justly •held to a very high degree of care for their safety; and accordingly it has been often said, both in this and in other jurisdictions, that he is held to the exercise of the highest degree of care.”

The term “taxicab” describes a conveyance similar to a hackney carriage, but propelled by electric or steam power, and held for public hire at designated places subject to municipal control. Every element involved in the carriage of a passenger in a passenger elevator is included in the service performed by a taxicab. The operator of the taxicab is in no manner under the control of the passenger, exceptiñg only with respect to the transportation to the place of destination. The operation of the cab is completely within the power and control of the operator. Like in a passenger elevator, the passenger is inclosed in a cab, and when he engages the services he places himself completely in the power of the operator. The cab itself is subject to the call of any member of the public. In fact, the defendant maintained for such service twenty-eight of these cabs. The particular cab in question was stationed at a railroad depot, ■ presumably for the conveyance of .travelers, and was dispatched' to the place where the plaintiff required service by an. employee at the office of the defendant. No. specific bargain was made as to mileage or [305]*305rates, but the ordinary rule in vogue for passenger service for the benefit of the public was employed. The cab was supplied with a taximeter, which registered the mileage, and the fixed rates were applied to the actual mileage, and the sum charged was based both upon the rates and the mileage. Those employing taxicabs desire greater speed and convenience in transacting their business than is furnished by the ordinary street car or jitney bus.

In connection with what has been said, we cannot ignore our common knowledge with respect to the extent of the development of the taxicab business engaged in the transportation of members of the public in the larger cities. Such development has kept pace with the use of the automobile generally; and while the evidence in this particular case is not as complete ánd as satisfactory as it undoubtedly could have been made, nevertheless there is every indication persuasive of the fact that the defendant’s business was operated pursuant to the usual and ordinary custom prevailing with respect to the taxicab business in general.

Defendant’s counsel place great reliance upon the decision in the case of Terminal Taxicab Co. v. Public Utilities Comm’rs, 241 U. S. 252, 36 Sup. Ct. 583. In that case the court held that that portion of the defendant’s business being four tenths of its entire business and which consisted mainly in furnishing automobiles from its central garage on. orders, generally by telephone, was not to be regarded as a public utility. In the Terminal Taxicab Case it was said that “The bargains are individual, and, however much they may tend towards uniformity in price, probably have not quite the mechanical fixity of charges that attend the use of taxicabs from the stations and hotels.”

In the federal case referred to, a distinction was drawn between those cabs which travel between fixed points like hotels and railroad stations and taxicabs hired pursuant to an individual bargain at a fixed price. In rendering its [306]*306decision, however, the court freely admitted its doubt as to the correctness of the position taken by it.

A careful comparison of the facts in the federal case and the instant case will show that, while the service furnished by the defendant in the instant case was pursuant to a telephone call to the general office, the cab furnished was not stationed at the office but at the depot, and that no individual bargain was made for the service, but that the transportation proceeded upon a regular schedule based upon fixed'rates and on-mileage registered by a taximeter.

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Bluebook (online)
191 N.W. 748, 179 Wis. 300, 31 A.L.R. 1197, 1923 Wisc. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-yellow-cab-co-wis-1923.