Capital Transportation Co. v. Howard

229 S.W.2d 998, 217 Ark. 333, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 418
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 22, 1950
Docket4-9164
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 229 S.W.2d 998 (Capital Transportation Co. v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Transportation Co. v. Howard, 229 S.W.2d 998, 217 Ark. 333, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 418 (Ark. 1950).

Opinion

Holt, J.

March 23, 1949, appellee, Mattie Howard, brought this suit to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received when she fell in the aisle of appellant’s electric trolley bus, because of appellant’s negligence in operating the bus.

Appellant answered with a general denial and affirmatively pleaded contributory negligence of appellee. A jury awarded appellee $600, and from the judgment on the verdict is this appeal.

Appellant makes no complaint as to the amount of the verdict but earnestly contends that there was no substantial evidence to warrant it.

After a review of all the testimony, we hold that this contention must be sustained.

Only three witnesses, who were on the bus. at the time of the mishap, testified in the case. September 8, 1948, appellee, a Negro woman, weighing about 250 pounds, boarded appellant’s bus, carrying a sack of groceries. After paying tier fare, she proceeded to the rear, but just before she reached her seat the bus gave a “sudden jerk” or “snatched” and she fell to the-floor receiving injuries. Appellee testified: “A. I got on the bus at 9th and Chester. When I started back to my seat, I made it almost to the seat, when I turned to wheel the bus gave a sudden jerk and flattened me out on the floor. Q. Did the bus start immediately when yon got on it! A. It started immediately, when I got on the bus it started up immediately. When I got back nearly to where I thought I would have a seat it gave a jerk and jerked me down. . . . Q. Do yon know what caused that sudden'jerk! A. I don’t know what would make the bus, the driving of the bus would be the only thing that would make a sudden jerk. Q. It did jerk! A. It jerked me flat'of my back, laid me out on the floor, stretched me out just like (making motion with hands).’ Q. Did it tear your grocery bag! A. Tore the grocery bag and broke the handle off my purse. Q. Did it daze or addle you! A. Yes, sir, it dazed me pretty bad, I didn’t know how bad I was until that night. ’ ’

Willie Jiles, on behalf of appellee, testified that she was a passenger at the time, sitting in the rear. She saw appellee, along with several other people, get on the bus, and further: “A. Just to tell the truth, I didn’t pay any attention, they were all getting on the bus, I didn’t pay any attention until she hit the floor, that is when I looked, I was looking out through the window when the bus stopped, I was sitting where I could see out the window, when the bus started off she fell. I didn’t know who it was at the time because there were some, some more standing up there and I kinder looked around I said ‘ Oh, who was that hit the floor’ a man picked her up, I don’t know who he was but I did see her fall. Q. Had the bus proceeded some ways past the corner where she got on before she fell? A. I just don’t know, to tell you the truth I wasn’t paying so much attention because when I am on a bus I don’t pay any attention to who gets on and off, I was looking through, the window when the bus started off and she fell, I saw that. Q. Did anything attract your attention other than her falling 1 A. When the bus started off it was a snatch. Q. You felt the snatch when she fell? A. Yes, I heard her falling and I peeped around some other passenger and saw her laying on the floor, I spoke to someone, I said ‘a mighty big woman to fall.’ ”

On behalf of appellant, the bus driver, L. 0. Gary, testified: “A. Well, she boarded my bus at 9th and Chester. She had a sack of groceries, she deposited her fare in the bos, ... I started the bus immediately after she deposited her fare and she walked back to the rear of the bus, naturally as anyone would, and I just drove on down the street as naturally as I always do. I had driven about half a block when I heard a sack hit the floor. ... I immediately glanced up in the rear view mirror and saw a Negro man pick up the sack of groceries and hand it to a colored lady, .just set them in her lap and he sat back down,” that appellee later came up and asked for a transfer but made no complaint.

There appears no disagreement as to the law governing cases of this nature. The same standard of care is required in the operation of trains, buses, street cars and trolley buses. Our rule is well settled that we must affirm where there appears any substantial evidence to support the jury’s verdict. It is also our duty to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the appellee, giving to it, its strongest probative value, in her favor, with every reasonable inference deducible from it, whether from all the evidence presented or from appellee’s testimony only, (Harmon v. Ward, 202 Ark. 54, 149 S. W. 2d 575, and St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company v. Holwerk, 204 Ark. 587, 163 S. W. 2d 175).

As we read the testimony of appellee and her witness, Jiles, in the light of the above rules, it amounts to this: After appellee had boarded the bus with a sack of groceries in her arms, she paid her fare, walked toward a seat in the rear and when “almost-to the seat, when I turned to wheel, the bus gave a sudden jerk and flattened me out on the floor.”

Jiles testified that the bus “snatched” just before appellee fell. Neither of these witnesses, nor any other, testified that there was a violent or unusual jerk.

Before appellee would be entitled to recover, the burden was on her to show,, by some substantial testimony, that her fall and consequent injuries resulted from a violent or an unusual jerk, amounting to negligence on the part of appellant in operating its bus. We so held, in effect, in such cases as St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Porter, 199 Ark. 133, 134 S. W. 2d 546; Missouri Pacific Railroad Company v. Baum, 196 Ark. 237, 117 S. W. 2d 31, and Missouri Pacific Transportation Co. v. Bell, 197 Ark. 250, 122 S. W. 2d 958.

In the Baum case, Judge DoNham, speaking for the court, quoted with approval, the following rule from 10 C. J., § 1387, page 973, as follows: “ ‘The jerk or jolt must be unnecessarily or unusually sudden or violent; such jerks and jars as are necessarily incident to the use of the conveyance, and are not the result of negligence, will not render the carrier liable for resulting injuries. ’

“In American Jurisprudence, Yol. 10, p. 213, § 1343, it is said: ‘Sudden jerks and jolts in the movement of railroad trains or street cars are generally accepted as among the usual incidents of travel, which every passenger by experience has learned to expect to some extent. At precisely what point such violent movements lose their character as incidents reasonably to be expected during the course of travel and assume the status of actionable negligence is a question of fact, to be determined in the light of the surrounding circumstances. However, unusually sharp jerks of a vehicle or violent jolting due to a defect in the track or the negligent operation of the car has been frequently viewed as imposing 'liability upon the carrier for the resulting injuries to a passenger.’ ...
“The carrier is not an absolute insurer of the safety of its passengers. It is only required to exercise towards its passengers the highest degree of care which a prudent and cautions man woulpl exercise, and that which is reasonably consistent with the mode of conveyance and practical operation of its trains. ...

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W.2d 998, 217 Ark. 333, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-transportation-co-v-howard-ark-1950.