East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railroad v. Massengill

83 Tenn. 328
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 83 Tenn. 328 (East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railroad v. Massengill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railroad v. Massengill, 83 Tenn. 328 (Tenn. 1885).

Opinion

FreemaN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff sues the defendant because, as alleged-in his declaration, the company having agreed, in consideration of fare paid, “to carry plaintiff on its road to his home at Union depot,” and there stop its. train and allow plaintiff to descend from same in safety, which said agreement was not kept,” but by its carelessness, negligence and failure to perform its-duties the plaintiff was, at or near Union depot, violently thrown to the ground, and greatly injured, etc.

Defendant pleads not guilty, and a special plea “ that the injuries received were caused by the careless and negligent conduct of the plaintiff in attempting to get off defendant’s train while said train was-in motion.”

On . these issues the case went to a jury, who, under the instructions of the court, gave a verdict of $7,000 in favor of plaintiff, from the judgment on which an appeal in error is prosecuted to this-court. The Referees have reported in favor of an. affirmance of the judgment, to which defendant files-seven exceptions, opening all the questions in the case..

A short statement of facts will present such questions as we deem necessary to consider in the’ disposition of the case.

[330]*330Plaintiff had obtained a ticket at Dalton, Georgia, purchasing a ticket to Johnson City, his home at Union depot being beyond that. At Johnson City, plaintiff, who was unknown to the conductor, Charles Toms, said to him his ticket was out there, and asked him if he could stop and put him off at Union ■depot. The conductor told him he was behind time, and could not do so, but sold- him a ticket to Bristol, beyond his home, telling him he could go on to that point and take the western bound train, coming back to Union, and get home sooner than from Johnson City, to which plaintiff agreed. However, at a station five miles from Union depot, the conductor came to plaintiff, and told him he had made up his lost time, and would stop for him to get off at Union depot, at the same time paying back the difference between the fare to Bristol and Union. So plaintiff rode on under this contract that he was to get off at Union, his home. It is proper to add, the night train on which plaintiff was traveling did not, as per its schedule, stop at Union depot.

The train reached Union depot about four o’clock, February, 1883. On approaching Union depot, the conductor rang the bell, as plaintiff says, several hundred yards from the depot. ■ “When the train got near, as I thought, I went to the rear of the car; I discerned what I thought to be the depot; when I came to the platform I thought the train was in ■the act of stopping, not perfectly still; when the train came up I discerned the depot; the stopping place is right near the depot, sometimes beyond it; I [331]*331thought when I stepped off the' train had stopped about five steps east of the depot. The place I aimed to get off is the usual place of getting off; when the train reached this place I thought it was perfectly still, and stepped off.” In doing so, the train being in fact in motion, he was thrown to the ground and severely injured. We have given the above quotation from the testimony of plaintiff himself, who may be assumed to have given the case no unfavorable coloring against himself at least. He adds, in conclusion of his testimony, “ at the time I stepped off the train I thought it had stopped; I was not calculating it was still running,” and that the conductor did not, assist him off.

On cross examination, he says he “could see the •depot, as he was coming out and walking on the steps ” to get out, “ and the train was in motion ; I knew it was in motion as it passed the depot, but thought it had stopped as I stepped off on the ground.” He “ stepped off about five steps only after the train passed the depot.”

Several objections are urged against the charge of his Honor, the circuit judge, among others that it is so vague, general and abstract as to have misled the jury, and this is assigned as reversible error.

The charge is subject to the criticism of being too elaborate, too much in the way of general discussion of several questions, not the vital ones, by any means, in the case. But we have repeatedly said, we cannot undertake to revise the mere form or errors of taste, as we might think, in the inferior [332]*332courts. We must see an affirmative error of lav by which a jury might reasonably have been misled.

On the main question, however, on which the case turned, and which by the declaration was the gravamen of the suit, that is, of culpable negligence on the part of defendant in not stopping its train, as agreed, at Union depot, so that plaintiff could safely descend the steps and get off, it is insisted there is palpable error.

His Honor, after charging that if the conductor had agreed to put plaintiff off at Union, had taken his fare to this place, he was bound to do so, and that he was bound to do so at the usual place, etc., says: “And if the conductor led the plaintiff to believe he would stop at the-usual place for taking and letting off passengers, and if plaintiff, laboring under such belief, prepared himself to get off at such point, and if, bemg so induced by the said conductor, he honestly and in good faith believed that said train had stopped at the accustomed place for taking and letting off passengers, when in-fact it had not, and if plaintiff, while the train was in motion, but in good faith believed it had stopped, stepped off, and was thrown forward by the motion of the train and injured, then the railroad would be liable.” He adds this qualification to the above: “But if the evidence should show that the said train, on reaching the depot or accustomed place of stopping,, was simply checking up in order to stop, but had not stopped, then if plaintiff, knowing this, jumped off such train while the same was moving, of his own accord, and was thrown forward and injured, then [333]*333plaintiff could not recover.” He then adds: “ If plaintiff, at the time he was injured, was not in the exercise of ordinary care, he cannot recover.”

The court was correct as to the introductory prop-position, that if the conductor, receiving the fare to Union depot, had agreed to stop at that point, he was bound to do so. “A conductor, agreeing to put a passenger off at a place not’a regular station, is bound -to stop the train at that place, so that the passenger ■can get off in safety, even though his ticket is only to the last station passed before reaching it, additional fare being receivable, if demanded: Wait’s Act. & Def., vol. 5, page 312; Western Railroad Company v. Young, 57 Ga., 489.

But the theory of the main proposition cited above .is clearly erroneous as applied to the facts of this ■case, and the issues on which his Honor was called •on to instruct the jury, when he said to the jury, after stating the conductor was bound to stop, as agreed, “and if the conductor led the plaintiff to believe that he would stop at the usual place for letting off passengers, and if plaintiff, laboring under such impression, prepared to get off,” etc., could only have been understood by the jury as laying down the rule that the mere agreement and duty to stop and ringing bell was sufficient ground and inducement by the conductor to authorize plaintiff to honestly believe that the train had stopped, and so the company was liable for thus having misled him to his injury.

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Related

Paschall v. Southern Ry. Co.
208 S.W.2d 531 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
83 Tenn. 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-tennessee-virginia-georgia-railroad-v-massengill-tenn-1885.