Davis v. Kelly

237 S.W. 698, 152 Ark. 151, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 698 (Davis v. Kelly) 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
Davis v. Kelly, 237 S.W. 698, 152 Ark. 151, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 19 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Mrs. Kelly, the plaintiff below, was injured while alighting from one of appellant’s trains, and has recovered a judgment to compensate that injury in the sum of $3,000, from which is this appeal. No objections were made to any testimony offered at the trial, and all the instructions requested by the railroad company were given. The errors assigned for the reversal of the judgment are that the court erred in giving instructions, and that the verdict is excessive.

Appellant insists that the case presents a question of a failure to furnish proper station facilities, and not one of negligence in the operation of trains. The court below was not of that opinion, but submitted the case on the theory that — if plaintiff’s version of her injury were accepted as true — she was injured in the operation of a train, and the jury was told that the railroad would be liable for the consequences thereof, if the injury resulted from the failure of the railroad to exercise the high degree of care due a passenger in the operation of trains.

There would be no difficulty about this case but for the fact that, after giving instructions which, taken as a whole, correctly declared the law'of the case, the court, of its own motion, gave an oral instruction reading- as follows: “You are instructed that it was the duty of the defendant company to furnish the plaintiff, after she had become a passenger on one of its trains, a safe place to alight therefrom, and the fact that the defendant’s train may have been behind schedule would not relieve the defendant company from its duty, and if you find by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant failed to furnish the plaintiff a safe place to alight from one of its trains, and' that such failure was the proximate cause of such injury, if any, sustained by the plaintiff, then it will be your duty under the law to return a verdict for the plaintiff.” To the giving of this instruction the special objection was made that “it makes the duty of furnishing a safe place apparently an absolute duty, instead of making it a test of what due care would require under the particular circumstances, and for the further reason that, in discussing the question of whether the train was behind schedule, it points out particular 'evidence and states its effect to the jury.”

The first objection to this instruction must be conceded to be correct; but we have concluded the error in giving it does not call for the reversal of the judgment, for the reason that, in our opinion, the undisputed evidence establishes liability for the plaintiff’s injury.

The undisputed testimony establishes the following facts: On the night of December 24,1919, Mrs. Kelly purchased a ticket at Hunter for Hillman, and became a passenger on one of appellant’s trains, which arrived at Hillman after midnight. The train was late and overran the platform provided for the use of passengers in entering and leaving trains a distance of from fifty to one hundred feet. There was some conflict in the testimony as to just what this distance was, but the testimony is undisputed that the train so far overran the platform that the platform was not available for the use of passengers. Mrs. Kelly was about forty-nine years old at the time of her injury, and weighed over two hundred pounds. When she arrived at the steps of the coach in which she was a passenger, she found the train had overrun the platform, and she expressed the fear that she could not safely aliglit from the train. The brakeman was present, and had placed the foot-stool, carried by him, beneath the step of the car, and he assured Mrs. Kelly that she could aliglit safely, and that he would assist her in doing so. A Mrs. Jennie Hale was also a passenger at the time, and preceded Mrs. Kelly in leaving the car. Mrs. Hale testified that “the condition of the ground at the place we alighted from the train was rolling, or slanting, a considerable grade there, a good sized dump.” Mrs. Hale was a younger and smaller woman, and, after getting off the train, she turned and called back, “Mrs. Kelly, don’t come off there, you will kill yourself.” Mrs. Kelly relied, however, on the brakeman’s assurance of safety and his promise of assistance and made the attempt, in fact, she appeared to have had no alternative except to remain on the train. The brakeman admitted that Mrs. Kelly spoke of his being too small a man to assist a large lady like herself, but he told her that by doing the best he could he thought he could help her off all right. The brakeman admitted the footstool was not level, and for that reason he put his foot in the hole of the stool, and hung his lantern on his arm so he could use both hands in preventing Mrs. Kelly from falling. The only witness called by appellant who had anything to do with the operation of the train was the brakeman, and he testified the engine of the train was in control of an extra engineer, and that the train would have pulled up to the platform if he had given the necessary signal, but that he did not do so for the reason that the train was late. Mrs. Kelly swung down from the step of the car until her foot rested on the foot-stool, when she released her hold on the handles of the car, whereupon the foot-stool tilted, and she stumbled from the stool, thereby wrenching her knee and sustaining the injury for which she sues.

We think this testimony makes a case of liability, not that it is negligent to stop a train where there is no platform for the use of passengers, but because there was a platform here which the passengers were not permitted to nse. There may he no such thing as an absolutely safe place for passengers to enter and leave trains, and for this reason the court erred in telling the jury, in the oral instruction, that the railroad was under the duty of furnishing a safe place; but the undisputed testimony shows that within less than a hundred feet of the place used for debarking there was a much safer place than the one used. The platform was a permanent structure; it was level; and there was no danger of its tilting. Moreover, the undisputed testimony shows that the distance from the lower step of the car to the footstool was at least eight inches greater than the distance would have been from the lower step of the car to the platform. The use of the platform gave reasonable assurance of safety, and the only reason stated by the brakeman for not pulling the train up to it was that the train was already late.

As we have said, the court was not in error in refusing to submit the case upon the theory that the plaintiff’s injury arose out of the company’s failure to furnish proper stational facilities, the measure of which duty is to exercise ordinary care to furnish reasonably safe facilities. That duty had been discharged; the company had such facility but did not use it.

In the case of Prescott & N. W. R. Co. v. Thomas, 114 Ark. 56, the contention was made that ordinary care is the requirement with respect to-a passenger getting on or off a train; but we there said: “But we have held otherwise in the ease of St. L. I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Woods, 96 Ark. 311, where it was sáid: ‘The higher degree of care is exacted only during the time in which the passenger has given himself wholly in charge of the carrier, while on the train or getting on or off, for then only is the passenger subjected to the peculiar hazards of that mode of travel against which the carrier must exercise the highest degree of skill and care.”

We think, in the discharge of this high degree of care due Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 698, 152 Ark. 151, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-kelly-ark-1922.