Barlick v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

41 Pa. Super. 87, 1909 Pa. Super. LEXIS 16
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 1909
DocketAppeal, No. 79
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 Pa. Super. 87 (Barlick v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barlick v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 41 Pa. Super. 87, 1909 Pa. Super. LEXIS 16 (Pa. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The plaintiff was a passenger on a Sunday excursion train of the defendant company, which, at seven o’clock in the mom[90]*90ing of September 8, 1907, left Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, for Cumberland, Maryland. About twenty minutes after the train started, before it had reached Braddock, the first stop, which is ten or twelve miles from Pittsburg, a passenger sitting in front of the plaintiff tossed an empty beer bottle out of an open window, while the train was in motion, and the bottle striking a car upon another track was broken and a piece of the glass passing back into the car through an open window inflicted a painful but not serious cut upon the cheek of the plaintiff. The plaintiff brought this action to recover from the defendant carrier damages for the injury so sustained, recovered a judgment in the court below and the defendant appeals.

Carriers of passengers are liable only for negligence, and are not insurers of the safety of their passengers, as they are as carriers of goods. The burden is upon the passenger who seeks to recover from a carrier damages for personal injuries sustained while upon his journey to prove negligence or facts from which a presumption of negligence arises: Meier v. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 64 Pa. 225; Fredericks v. Northern Central Railroad Co., 157 Pa. 103. The present case presents two questions: (1) did the plaintiff prove facts which gave rise .to a presumption of negligence and thus place upon the defendant the burden of disproving negligence; and (2) was the evidence such as to warrant the submission of the question of the negligence of the defendant company to the jury. The first question involves a consideration of the rule of evidence in cases of this character, and the second that relating to the responsibility of the carrier.

There was no dispute as to the plaintiff having been injured nor as to the manner in which the injury occurred. The learned judge of the court below affirmed a point submitted by the plaintiff in these words: “When a passenger, carried on a train, is injured, without fault of his own there is a legal presumption of negligence by the carrier, and the onus to disprove it is on the carrier.” The affirmance of this point is the foundation of the fifth specification of error. The eighth specification of error complains of the following language of the court, in the general charge: “And if in this case this plaintiff-was injured in the: [91]*91manner in which she says she was, and that fact is not denied, then there arises a presumption that the company at that time was negligent, and the burden is now on the company to prove to you that there was no negligence on its part or on the part of its employees, which caused or contributed to this accident.” There can be no question that these rulings imposed upon the defendant company the burden of disproving negligence. Was this rule of evidence properly applied in the case of an injury arising from the cause disclosed by the testimony in this case? There is no such privity between the carrier and a passenger, even one who is disorderly, as to make the former liable for the acts or negligence of the latter on the principle of respondeat superior: Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chicago Railway Company v. Hinds, 53 Pa. 512; Boatwright v. Railway Company, 4 Pa. Superior Ct. 279. “Where a passenger is injured, either by anything done or omitted by the carrier or its employees, or anything connected with the appliances of transportation, the burden of proof is upon the carrier to show that such injury was in no way the result of its negligence; but to throw this burden upon the carrier, it must first be shown that the injury complained of resulted from the breaking of machinery, collision, derailment of cars, or something improper or unsafe in the conduct of the business or in the appliances of transportation:” Thomas v. Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company, 148 Pa. 180; Federal Street & Pleasant Valley Railway Company v. Gibson, 96 Pa. 83; Pennsylvania Railroad Company v. MacKinney, 124 Pa. 462; Fleming v. Railway Company, 158 Pa. 130; Ginn v. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 220 Pa. 552; Ault v. Cowan, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 616. It is clear that the act of the fellow passenger in tossing through the open window an empty bottle, the accidental breaking thereof outside the train and the unfortunate return of a fragment of glass through the open'window, which injured the plaintiff, was in no way connected with the appliances or machinery used in the operation of the road, or the acts of the employees in the conduct of the train, or with the construction of the road, and, therefore, there is no presumption of negligence on the part of the appellant. The burden was upon the plaintiff to prove by affirmative evi[92]*92dence that the defendant company, or its employees, had been guilty of negligence which was responsible for her injury. The fifth and eighth specifications of error are sustained.

The defendant requested the court to charge that under all the evidence in the case the verdict of the jury should be for the defendant, and the refusal of that point is the subject of the fourth specification of error. This specification raises the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a finding that the employees of the defendant had been guilty of negligence which was. responsible for the injury for which this plaintiff seeks to recover. The act of the passenger who tossed the bottle out of the window may have been a negligent act, under the circumstances which accompanied it, and, if so, this plaintiff could recover from the party who did the act damages for her injuries, and it is most fortunate that, as disclosed by the evidence, she is aware of the identity of that person. The mere fact, however, that the injuries of the plaintiff resulted from a negligent or unlawful act of a fellow passenger is not of itself sufficient to render the carrier liable to answer in damages for such injury. Conductors on trains have authority to exercise reasonable control over the passengers and are responsible for the exercise of that authority. It is their duty to repress disorder upon the trains, and in case there is any reasonable ground to apprehend that other passengers may suffer physical injury from the violence of disorderly passengers it is their duty to use every means at their command to protect other passengers and restrain, and if .necessary remove from the train the disorderly parties: Kennedy v. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 623; Railway Co. v. Hinds, 53 Pa. 512. The carrier is not hable for the negligent or unlawful act of a passenger, which may result in an injury to a fellow passenger, upon the principle of respondeat superior. The carrier is, however, liable for injuries to a passenger resulting from the negligent or unlawful acts of a fellow passenger if prior to the accident the conduct of the offending party has been such as to indicate a disposition to indulge in physically violent conduct and give rise to a reasonable apprehension of injury to other parties. This is not upon the ground that the company is [93]*93liable to answer for the acts of all those whom it undertakes to carry, but it is because of the failure of the duty to afford reasonable and proper protection to other passengers. The carrier is not bound to provide against contingencies which it had no reasonable grounds to apprehend, nor is it bound to protect its passengers from rudeness or bad manners on the part of strangers or other passengers, unless such conduct amounts to a breach of the peace: Ellinger v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Pa. Super. 87, 1909 Pa. Super. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barlick-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-pasuperct-1909.