Citizens' Street Railway v. Steen

42 Ark. 321
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 Ark. 321 (Citizens' Street Railway v. Steen) 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
Citizens' Street Railway v. Steen, 42 Ark. 321 (Ark. 1883).

Opinion

EakiN, J.

This is an action by appellee against a street railway company in Little Rock, to recover damages for an injury to her person and property, .occasioned by a collision between a car of the company and a horse and buggy with which she was driving, upon a street along which the line of railway ran.

The buggy was partially upset against a sand bank, and to some extent injured; the horse was lamed, and the plaintiff herself bruised and hurt.

The jury found for the plaintiff, fixing her damages at $150. A motion for a new trial was denied, exceptions taken, and an appeal.

The material facts proven for plaintiff are as follows : She was driving down the street with her little son in the buggy. The boy stood up, cried to his mother that the street car was coming, and struck the horse with a whip to increase his speed. He repeated the blow, and the horse went still faster, but not so fast as the coming car. There was a sand pile on the street, with a narrow carriage way between it and the track. "When about midway of this, where the buggy could not turn to either side, the collision occurred, with the results above mentioned. The top of the buggy was up, and she did not see the car when her son spoke. She says the car was going at an unusual rate of speed, and the driver did not stop when the accident occurred. The sand pile, on the street was so placed that all vehicles on that side were compelled to pass between it andthe railway, withonlyfourorfivefeetof room. There was some proof of actual pecuniary damage to the horse and buggy, including harness, but considerably short of the verdict. She says the buggy was struck by the front part of the car very forcibly. In this she is sustained by the testimony of a spectator, who says further that the driver of the car was coming at an extraordinary rate of speed, and that the driver did not stop, nor attempt to stop it. He thought the brake was broken and that the car would run over the mule on the down grade. The buggy was thirty or forty feet in advance of the car when he first saw it.

(Approved) 1. Negligence: Contributory:Counter negligence.

For defendant, the car driver testified that plaintiff was driving on the track,and he toldher to getoff, shewhipped up, and he understood her to say “ come ahead,” and she drove off the track. He attempted to pass her but the sand pile crowded her on towards the track, and she ran into the car at the rear end.

The front part of the car had passed the buggy without touching. On this last point he is corroborated by a passenger. He says further, that after the accident the car stopped about two minutes. The car could have been stopped in ten feet. Plaintiff in rebuttal denies that she told the driver to come ahead, or saw him before the collision.

The court on motion of the plaintiff, and against the objections of defendant, instructed the jury :

1. That although they might find the plaintiff to have been to some extent negligent, yet if the defendant did, or by reasonable diligence might have discovered the negligence in time, by using ordinary care, to have prevented the injury and failed to use such care, it would be responsible.

2. That the company was responsible for the damages to the property or person of plaintiff, by the wrongful act of its servant in running the car against the buggy, if they should find that he did so, unless they should further find that, the plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence.

In the first instruction asked by the defendant, amongst other things not objectionable, the court was asked to charge that if the plaintiff knew that the street was occupied by the railway track it was her duty, from time to time, to look behind to ascertain if a car was approaching from the rear, and the failure to do so was contributory negligence, which would preclude her recovery.

In the second instruction asked by defendant it was asserted that the duty of carefulness rested both on plaintiff and defendant, and thatif both were negligentand“ their conduct was the legitimate result of such negligence,” she can not recover.

The third of defendant’s proposed instructions asserted the duty of all persons driving along a street, having upon it a line of street railroad, to keep out of the way of the cars, and if the jury should find that plaintiff negligently or carelessly clrove so near to the track of the defendant’s line of railroad as to be in danger of collision with its cars, and did not exercise due care in watching the approach of the car, this constitutes contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and before the plaintiff can recover, it must be established by a preponderance of testimony that the negligence of the company was the result of a disregard of consequences, or of duty, on the part of the defendant, showing an intent to do an injury.”

He asked iu his fourth instruction that the court declare “ the reasonable speed of a street car to be the average rate of carriages used to convey passengers by horse power.”

(Approved) (Approved) Counter negligence Ordignary diligence. (Approved) 2. What is ordinary care: Negligence: What is.

“ 5. If the injury sustained was the product of mutual or concurring negligence, no action would lie.”

“ 6. If the plaintiff contributed to the accident, then sbe must establish by preponderating evidence that the injury was inflicted by defendant willfully and wantonly.”

“ 7. That only actual damages, to be shown by positive proof, could be recovered. The plaintiff would not be entitled to exemplary damages unless the injury was the result of wanton, willful and intentional wrong.”

All these were refused as asked, but the court modified the second to read as follows:

“ The mere fact that the defendant was negligent, will not entitle the plaintiff to recover, if the plaintiff was also negligent, and that the duty of being careful rests both on the company and the plaintiff; and if the jury find from the evidence that the plaintiff and defendant were both negligent, and that the negligence of the plaintiff was the proximate cause of the injury, she can not recover, and they will find for defendant.”

The defendant excepted to this modification.

The court further, upon its own motion, charged the jury that no action could be maintained where there had been mutual negligence, and the negligence of each was the proximate cause of the injury.

It explained to them the meaning of proximate cause to be “ negligence directly contributory to produce or bring about the injury.”

Further, that though some negligence might be shown on the part of plaintiff, yet if the defendant, knowing of that negligence, might, by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence, at the time of the injury, have avoided the same, an action would lie for the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ark. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-street-railway-v-steen-ark-1883.