Boisen v. Cobbs & Mitchell

111 N.W. 82, 147 Mich. 429, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 934
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1907
DocketDocket No. 61
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 N.W. 82 (Boisen v. Cobbs & Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boisen v. Cobbs & Mitchell, 111 N.W. 82, 147 Mich. 429, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 934 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Blair, J.

Defendant corporation is organized for ‘ the purchase, manufacture, and sale of all kinds of forest products and the utilization of the waste thereof, the manufacture and sale of salt and the buying and selling of all kinds of merchandise.” As an incident to its business, it operates a logging railroad, upon the main line of which it authorizes the conductors of its trains to receive passengers for hire, and furnishes them with tickets or slips to be given to passengers upon payment of fare. Defendant has no passenger cars, and its instructions are that passengers must ride in the caboose, and not elsewhere. It does not solicit passenger traffic, has no train schedule, and the movement of its trains is governed solely by the [430]*430demands of its private business. The conductors are expressly instructed not to accept passengers for points on the branches from the main line running into the lumber camps.

On September 13, 1904, plaintiff entered the caboose to take passage to Camp 29 on defendant’s Petoskey branch to deliver some clothing to its employés there. The train was composed of a locomotive, a caboose, a trailer, and four flat bark cars. The conductor collected plaintiff’s fare.

“ I asked him if he was going to Camp 29. He said he was going right over there. He said that the caboose was going over. I gave him $1 and he gave me 75 cents back.”

About half a mile from Camp 29 the' caboose was switched in onto another track, and plaintiff was informed by the conductor that, if he wanted to proceed to Camp 29, he would have to ride on a certain flat car, which the conductor pointed out to him. Plaintiff got upon the car indicated, which was the farthest car from the engine which was pushing the train, but was the first car of the train in the direction of Camp 29. The conductor sat upon the same car with the plaintiff, and near to him. Near the switch where the caboose was left, there is a rising grade for a short distance, and the grade then descends towards Camp 29. After the train had reached the top of the grade, and was just descending, the train broke in two, the car upon which plaintiff was riding collided with a box car standing on the track, and he was seriously injured. The train was running at the rate of about four miles an hour. The conductor jumped and shouted, and motioned to plaintiff to jump. Plaintiff did not understand the conductor, and did not realize the danger he was in till too late to save himself. Immédiately after the accident the draught iron of one of the flat cars was found on the track near where the train broke in two. The key which goes through a slot in the end of the draught iron and the ring which is inserted in a hole in [431]*431the lower end of the key for the purpose of holding the draught iron in place were not found. About a month before the accident plaintiff and a companion had ridden over this Petoskey branch on a flat car with the same conductor from Camp 23, on the mainline, to Camp 29 and back again, andhad paid lOcentseach for fare. Excursions are run from time to time over this road. On Saturdays the company carries men free who desire to trade at its store in Springvale. Conductors were required to account to the office at the end of the month for money collected from fares. They kept such money in a place by itself, but kept no record of it at all. The conductors turn the money that they collect into the office at Boyne Falls, and from there it goes to Cadillac. There is an account kept of it by the company.

The court submitted the case to the jury under the second count of the declaration, alleging that it was the duty of the defendant—

“ To furnish plaintiff with a reasonably safe car on which to ride, and to reasonably equip and operate its said train so that it might and would be safe for plaintiff to ride thereon, * * * yet the said defendant negligently and carelessly disregarding its said duties, did not then and there furnish the plaintiff with a safe place to ride, and did not then and there carefully and prudently and safely furnish, equip, and operate its said train, but, on the contrary, by its said officers and agents, proceeded to and did carelessly and negligently undertake to carry said plaintiff upon a train with faulty and imperfect couplings between the cars composing said train, and which would and did uncouple by the operation of said train,” etc.

By motions to direct a verdict and for a new trial, and by exceptions and proper assignments of errors, defendant raises questions stated by its counsel as follows:

“1. Was the plaintiff a passenger at the time of the accident ?
“2. Was there any evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant ?
“3. Was the risk of injury assumed by the plaintiff?
[432]*432“ 4. Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence ?
“5. Was it the duty of the defendant to safely carry the plaintiff on its branch road to Camp 29 ?
“6. Was it error to exclude the evidence offered by the defendant ?
“7. Was the argument of plaintiff’s counsel reversible error ?
“8. Should the motion for new trial have been granted ? ”

We are of the opinion that a verdict should háve been directed for the defendant. Under the circumstances of this case the defendant owed no duty to the plaintiff to provide for his safety when riding elsewhere than in the caboose, and he must be held to have assumed the risk of any injury which occurred to him in consequence of his riding on the flat car. It is conceded that defendant was not a .common carrier of passengers, and the court so instructed the jury. Defendant was under no obligation to receive and carry any particular person as a passenger, or to carry passengers at all. If it chose to carry passengers, it had a right to determine where they should ride. It had determined in this case that passengers should be carried in the caboose alone, and not elsewhere, and had so instructed its conductors. The case is barren of evidence that defendant knew that its instructions were disobeyed, and that passengers were, even occasionally, carried on flat cars. That there was actual notice to defendant is not claimed, and the fact that plaintiff and a companion had once ridden upon a flat car falls far short of charging the defendant with notice of such a practice. The fact that the company received from its conductors money, a portion of which had been paid by persons riding on flat cars, was no evidence of notice to the company in the absence of some evidence to indicate its improper source. There is no such evidence in the record.

The plaintiff’s contract, as stated by himself, was that he was to be carried in the caboose to his destination. It might well be held that this contract was within the scope [433]*433of the conductor’s agency, since he was authorized to and did carry passengers in the caboose on defendant’s railroad, and limitations of his authority to particular parts of the road were not known to plaintiff. But the conductor’s direction to plaintiff to finish his journey upon the fiat car was not within the scope of his agency. He was expressly prohibited from allowing passengers to ride upon the flat cars. The defendant did not permit passengers to ride upon its flat cars upon any part of its road.

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120 N.W. 375 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 N.W. 82, 147 Mich. 429, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boisen-v-cobbs-mitchell-mich-1907.