Clarke v. Rhode Island Electric Lighting Co.

17 A. 59, 16 R.I. 463, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 17 A. 59 (Clarke v. Rhode Island Electric Lighting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. Rhode Island Electric Lighting Co., 17 A. 59, 16 R.I. 463, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 22 (R.I. 1889).

Opinion

Durfee, C. J.

The female plaintiff was injured, while passing through a private gangway in the city of Providence, by having a step ladder, which was left leaning against a building in the gangway by the defendant’s servant, blow over or fall upon her. She sued the defendant and bas recovered damages, the ground of her action being that her injuries resulted from the negligence of the servant in leaving the ladder as he did. The case was tried in this court, and comes before us now on motion for new trial. The questions presented depend so entirely on tbe testimony, and the facts and circumstances shown thereby, that those facts and circumstances need to be carefully stated.

The gangway leads from Westminster Street, tbe principal business street of tbe city, to Exchange Place, so called. It is eighteen feet wide, smoothly concreted between the curbs. Twenty feet from Westminster Street and fifteen feet from the sidewalk, which is two and a half feet wide, there is a sign fastened to Brownell’s Building, a business block abutting on the gangway, on which sign are the words, Private Property : Dangerous *464 Passing. The first story of Brownell’s Building was leased to the firm of B. H. Gladding & Co., who used it as a dry goods store. They used the gangway under their lease for the receipt and discharge of merchandise. There was a door opening on it, through which their employés, numbering fifty six, were required to come and go, and through which their customers were also accustomed to come and go, using the gangway for the purpose. A member of the firm testified that the store was narrow and apt to fill up in front, so that there was difficulty in passing through, and consequently the customers were in the habit of going out and in by said side door. The plaintiff entered the store from Westminster Street, and when she had finished her shopping, finding the front crowded, passed out by the side door, as she had been accustomed to do, for the purpose of going through the gangway to Westminster Street, and met with the accident while doing so.

When she came out the step ladder was on the sidewalk forty feet distant toward Westminster Street. The step ladder was nine feet high, and was used by the defendant’s servant in his work as servant. The defendant was maintaining electric lights for the firm of B. PI. Gladding & Co. A box containing electrical apparatus for switching the lights on in the store was fastened to Brownell’s Building fifteen feet above the sidewalk where the ladder stood. The servant had charge of the lights in the store and along Westminster Street, and, just before the plaintiff came out of the store, had been using the ladder to reach the box in the proper performance of his service. After doing what was required he left the ladder standing unsecured, and went into a store in Butler Exchange, on the opposite side of the gangway. It does not appear for what purpose he went, but he returned in about five minutes, just after the accident had occurred. Pie testified that he had, earlier in his employment, been accustomed to leave the ladder lying on the walk; but a lady caught her dress in it one day, while it was so lying, and the janitor of the building told him to leave it standing. The janitor testified that he told the servant that it was dangerous to leave it standing, and a member of the firm testified that he had considered it dangerous, and told the janitor that he did not wish it left there.

The accident occurred November 4, A. D. 1887, between 1.30 *465 and 2.00 o’clock P. M. The day had been blustering, the wind blowing in gusts, and at the time of the accident was blowing quite violently from the north. The plaintiff came out into this wind, “ blowing very hard almost continuously,” says a witness who saw the accident, and immediately noticed a scraping noise, which she supposed might be caused by a horse running away, and which seems to have alarmed and confused her so that she was near the ladder before she perceived that it was swaying in the wind and making the noise that she heard, or realized the danger she was in from it. She then attempted to run across the gangway to escape, the wind all the while blowing strongly against her, and was overthrown in doing so, the ladder falling on top of her.

At the close of the testimony for the plaintiffs the defendant made several requests for instruction to the jury, which the court refused to grant. This refusal is the ground of the motion for a new trial. The requests were in effect requests to the court to charge that this testimony did not show that the defendant’s servant was guilty of any negligence, or that, if it did, it also showed that the plaintiff was equally guilty of negligence, or was at least guilty of contributory negligence, and was not, therefore, entitled to recover.

Generally the question of negligence is a question of fact to be determined by the jury ; but sometimes, when there is no controversy as to the facts, and when it clearly appears from them what course a person of ordinary prudence would pursue, it is a question for the court. So, when the standard of duty is fixed, or when the negligence is clearly defined and palpable, the court will not leave the case to the jury. But cases of this kind are few, and are generally cases in which the situation is so simple that any person of ordinary prudence would instantly perceive what to do or what to refrain from doing. Thus it is recognized by the courts as negligence for a passenger by steam car to attempt to leave it while it is in motion. So it is recognized by the courts to be negligence for a traveller to drive across a railroad track at grade without first assuring himself, by looking up and down the track, that there is no danger from an approaching train. But where the facts are complicated or extraordinary the case is usually left, and *466 properly left, to the jury. So, whether the facts be disputed or not, if they are such that different minds, fairly'considering them, might draw different conclusions from them, the question of negligence is for the jury. 2 Thompson on Negligence, 1286 ; Boss v. Providence & Worcester R. R. Co. 15 R. I. 149, 154.

It seems clear to us, in the light of these rules and principles, that the case at bar was properly a case for the jury, and that the court would have usurped the province of the jury if it had undertaken to decide it. Take the primary question, Was the defendant’s servant guilty of negligence in leaving the ladder as he did ? The question is, whether, when he left the ladder, being such a machine as it was, on the narrow sidewalk, leaning against the building at the angle at which it leant, in the gangway used, as it was, at a time of day when it was likely to be used by women coming from shopping at the store, with the wind blowing as it did strongly, and with unsteady gusts, he was guilty of negligence. The question is not to our minds simple and plain, but complicated, and fairly susceptible of different answers. We, who look back from after the event, see that it was dangerous for the servant to leave the ladder as he did. The question is, whether he should not have seen beforehand that it would be dangerous. We think this was clearly a question for the jury. It was the wind, blowing as it did with such force and fitful violence, that introduced an element which made the case peculiarly a case for the jury-

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 A. 59, 16 R.I. 463, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-rhode-island-electric-lighting-co-ri-1889.