Byron v. Boston & Maine Railroad

136 A. 250, 82 N.H. 434, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 136 A. 250 (Byron v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byron v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 136 A. 250, 82 N.H. 434, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 50 (N.H. 1926).

Opinion

Snow, J.

The defendant’s station at Exeter is upon the south side of two parallel main tracks, the southerly of which is known as the “east-bound,” and the northerly as the “west-bound.” The main platform is between the station and the east-bound track, and is partially protected by a projecting roof in front of the station and by open awnings or roofs extending east and west therefrom. The middle platform separates the two tracks .and is uncovered. Both platforms are of concrete construction, and are connected by four planked crossings, two of which are located in front of the station, the remaining two being situated one in either direction and some little distance therefrom. Otherwise the spaces between the rails are unfilled. Patrons of east-bound trains are received from, and discharged upon, the main platform, while those traveling upon west-bound trains use the middle platform.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that she and her sister, who were intending passengers upon the west-bound noon train and already supplied with tickets, approached the station from a northerly direction by a path in common use, which entered through an opening in the fence of the railroad location at a point westerly of the platforms. Passing in front of the engine which was at rest, they were proceeding easterly upon the middle platform when, at a point some six feet easterly of the easterly end of the most westerly plank cross *436 ing, the plaintiff claims to have slipped upon a patch of ice and to have fallen upon'the platform, receiving the injury complained of. The train consisted of an engine, baggage car, smoking car, and two coaches. The alleged point of the accident was opposite the middle or rear end of the baggage car. The plaintiff and her sister describe the patch of ice, from observations made after the accident, as about the size of a “chair bottom,” of oval shape, higher in the center and thinner at the edge,.clear of sand and ashes.

The defendant concedes its duty to maintain station platforms in reasonably safe condition (P. L., c. 249, s. 1; Haselton v. Railway, 71 N. H. 589, 591), but contends that it was not responsible to the plaintiff for the condition of the platform at the place of the accident. This position seems to be based upon the claim that it owed no duty to intending passengers approaching the train from other directions than the station unless, and until, they had reached the line of travel which they would have taken if traveling directly from the station to the train. Manifestly the duty of the railroad to its patrons has no such narrow limitation. As the plaintiff held a monthly ticket, and the train was ready to receive passengers, she had no occasion to enter the station. She had been employed at Haverhill, and, when she had work, had been accustomed to travel daily by train to and from her place of employment. She had customarily used the path in passing between her home and the station. There was evidence that it was a “good path” and in use by the defendant’s employees and others. If, however, it were conceded that the plaintiff was a wrongdoer until she reached the middle platform, such prior illegality of her conduct did not relieve the defendant of its duty to her after she had reached a place ostensibly prepared for passengers. There is no claim that the middle platform was not .designed for the use of passengers to its full extent, or that it was not customarily so used when the length of the train or other circumstances required. If the area to which the defendant’s invitation to intending passengers extended was not co-extensive with the boundaries of the concrete platform, no obvious limitation thereof is disclosed by the evidence. It cannot be said as a matter of law that the defendant’s duty of maintenance as respects this plaintiff was limited to the direct course of travel from the station to her train.

Nor is the plaintiff’s want of ordinary care conclusively established by the course of her approach. It is true that when she crossed the track ahead of the engine she might have continued across the east-bound track to the main platform which had the *437 protection of a sheltering awning, and thence proceeded by that platform and by one of the plank crossings to her train. It cannot be said, however, that no prudent person would have proceeded by the middle platform as she did.

Upon cross-examination the plaintiff admits that she did not notice, or look at, the platform before she fell; that if she had looked she could have seen the ice and would not have fallen. She, however, sets up as excusing circumstances that, upon crossing the northerly track, she had first stopped to reassure her sister who was timid about crossing in front of the engine, and that just before she fell she had again stopped and turned to make sure the sister was following her; that at this moment she was directed by a train man, standing at the front end of the nearest passenger coach, to “come on” or “hurry up”; that, hastening in response to this admonition, she turned again to go forward and had taken one, two or three steps, when she encountered the icy surface and fell; that she was afraid they were going to miss the train and was walking fast; that she was thinking about her sister, of what the trainman said and whether the train would leave before they got there; that she supposed that the platform would be clean and sanded, and did not look at it because she did not think it was necessary. The defendant’s evidence tended to show that as a matter of practice the station platforms, particularly the middle platform, were kept sanded “wherever there was any ice, or any danger of slipping whatsoever.” The last previous storm occurred six days before the accident, when 6.6 inches of snow fell. The temperature in the meantime had ranged between 46 degrees above zero and 27 degrees below.

It cannot be said that it conclusively appears upon the evidence that the ordinary person, under the exigencies of the situation in which the plaintiff was placed, would not have proceeded as she did in reliance upon the maintenance of the platform in the condition in which it was normally and usually kept. “It may be conceded that if the plaintiff had looked she would have refrained from stepping as she did, and still the defendants may be liable. The fact that more precaution on her part would have prevented the accident does not necessarily defeat a recovery. The question is whether some fair-minded men might say that, with her knowledge and in her situation, she acted with reasonable prudence without further investigating the condition of the ground she was to alight upon. The test of her right to have the question of her care determined by *438 a jury was not whether she did all that she could do in the way of taking precautions, but whether she did enough so that her conduct might be thought to be that of a person of average prudence.” Bass v. Railway, 70 N. H. 170, 173. Unless the carelessness of the plaintiff was so apparent that all fair-minded men must agree that she was negligent, the case was properly submitted to the jury. Blood v. New Boston, 77 N. H. 464, 465; Martel v. White Mills, 79 N. H. 439, 441.

The defendant, however, relies in argument upon an alleged admission by the plaintiff of the carelessness of her conduct: “Q.

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Bluebook (online)
136 A. 250, 82 N.H. 434, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byron-v-boston-maine-railroad-nh-1926.