Egan v. Connecticut Co.

12 Conn. Super. Ct. 177
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 3, 1943
DocketFile No. 31458
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Conn. Super. Ct. 177 (Egan v. Connecticut Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Egan v. Connecticut Co., 12 Conn. Super. Ct. 177 (Colo. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

The plaintiff, a woman in late middle life, brings this action to recover damages of the defendant, a common carrier of passengers operating a trolley system in New Haven. On the evening of December 6, 1940, at about 7 o'clock, the plaintiff was standing at the defendant's "stop pole" located on the northerly side of Lombard Street opposite the northerly terminus of Poplar Street across the highway, waiting to board a westbound trolley of the defendant to go downtown. In due time a westbound trolley made its appearance and the plaintiff signaled her intention to board. The motorman observed the plaintiff's signal and brought the trolley to a stop at a point beyond or west of the "stop pole." It is the plaintiff's claim that the trolley was brought to a stop 46 feet west of the pole in question. The court finds, however, that the trolley was in fact brought to a stop 20 feet west of the "stop pole."

After the trolley was thus brought to a stop beyond or west of the pole for the plaintiff to board, the plaintiff walked westerly along the sidewalk and then proceeded southerly in a direct line across a portion of the walk and out upon the highway to the then open front door of the standing trolley preliminary to boarding. The distance between the northerly curb of Lombard Street and the northerly rail of the defendant's westbound track is nine feet. When the plaintiff reached a point on the highway a few feet north of the open front door of the standing trolley, she fell and sustained injuries. The fall was caused by a pre-existing layer of snow and ice.

It appears that on the preceding day there had been a snowstorm. It further appears that Lombard Street and other highways in the vicinity were covered some few inches with snow on the night in question, as a result of the storm on the preceding day.

When the plaintiff had previously walked northerly on the easterly sidewalk of Poplar Street and had crossed over from the south side to the north side of Lombard Street to reach the "stop pole", she had experienced at least a little difficulty in perambulating over a slippery walking surface. In short, *Page 179 walking conditions on the night in question over sidewalks and across highways in the vicinity of Poplar and Lombard Streets were not of the best. The plaintiff knew this to be so.

The plaintiff testified that in the immediate vicinity of the "stop pole" the highway was in fairly good condition; that the snow had either been trampled or had been somewhat cleared away. Although no other evidence was offered on this aspect, the court feels justified in finding that in all probability other passengers previously boarding or alighting from trolleys at the "stop pole" had trampled the snow which had fallen on the preceding day and thereby made it appear that the highway of Lombard Street at this locus had been somewhat cleared of snow by a human agency. The extent that the snow in this area had been trampled and the total absence of a slippery walking surface remain a matter of conjecture. Weather conditions on the night in question were such that patches of trampled snow could be as hazardous to the pedestrian as an ice formation in spots.

The plaintiff's allegations of negligence are five in number:that the operator of the defendant's trolley failed "(1) to stop said car on the crosswalk opposite said pole; (2) to have adequate lights on the front of said car; (3) to provide plaintiff with a safe place to board said car in view of the conditions then and there existing; (4) to exercise reasonable care in view of the conditions then and there existing; and (5) that said operator invited and directed plaintiff to board said car at a place which he knew or should have known by the exercise of reasonable care, was unsafe and hazardous."

The second ground of alleged negligence was not developed at the trial by the plaintiff. Accordingly, it only becomes necessary to consider the limits of four of the five alleged grounds upon which liability is claimed.

To one actually a passenger, the defendant, as a carrier of passengers, was under the duty to exercise "the highest reasonable degree of care, vigilance, and forethought, which was consistent with the mode of conveyance and the practical operation of the road." Hinckley vs. Danbury, 81 Conn. 241,243 (quoted in Bowes vs. New England Transportation Co.,126 Conn. 200, 205, and see cases there cited). "This standard of care is fixed by the law." Maher vs. Connecticut Co.,113 Conn. 556, 559. But such carrier is not an insurer of *Page 180 the passenger's safety. Bowes case, supra, p. 205; Thorstonvs. Groton Stonington Street Ry. Co., 85 Conn. 11, 14. "The general rule applicable .... is that the carrier is bound to warn passengers of a danger when the circumstances are such that the carrier ought reasonably to foresee that it exists and that a passenger would not, in the exercise of reasonable care, be likely to observe and apprehend it." Bowes case,supra, p. 205, and see cases there collected. So, also, it has been held that where a passenger himself knows of a condition likely to produce injury to him, the carrier is not liable if that condition in fact produces an injury to the passenger. See, generally, Byrne vs. Connecticut Co., 123, Conn. 304; compare Dunne vs. Connecticut Co., 123 id. 680, distinguished in the Byrne case at p. 307.

The immediate inquiry concerns the plaintiff's status at the time in question. Was she a passenger? It is apparent that her status was only that of a "prospective passenger." The law is well stated in Donovan vs. Hartford Street Ry Co.,65 Conn. 201 and Vaughn vs. Healy, 120 id. 589. Certain principles ennunciated in these cases merit quotation.

"A common carrier is bound to exercise a high degree of care towards those who have put themselves under his care as passengers; but not until they have thus put themselves under his care. Up to that time, although they may have contracted with him for their future transportation, he owes no more care to them than to any third party. His special duty begins when, by coming upon his premises, or in the act of entering his vehicle, the actual relation of passenger to carrier is assumed." Donovan case, p. 214.

In the Vaughn case our Supreme Court quoted with approval the foregoing excerpt from its opinion in the Donovan case, and then commented (p. 592): "In that case we said that the fact that the plaintiff had signaled the driver of a street car to stop, that the latter had seen and responded to the signal, and that the plaintiff had advanced .... for the purpose of entering the car, was not sufficient to establish the relation of passenger and carrier."

So, also, the intention to become a passenger does not accelerate the relationship of passenger and carrier. "A present intention to become a passenger does not make the person who is approaching the car with that intention a passenger, nor change as to him the degree of care to be exercised by a street *Page 181 railway company with reference to others who are using the highway." Vaughn case, pp. 592-593, citing Duchemin vs.Boston Elevated Railway Co., 186 Mass. 353, 356 and annotation in 75 A.L.R. 286.

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Related

Lambert v. City of New Haven
30 A.2d 923 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1942)
Bowes v. New England Transportation Co.
10 A.2d 589 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1940)
Ireland v. Connecticut Co.
150 A. 520 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1930)
St. John v. Connecticut Co.
131 A. 396 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)
Thorson v. Groton & Stonington Street Railway Co.
81 A. 1024 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1911)
Moyles v. Connecticut Co.
160 A. 307 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
Maher v. Connecticut Co.
155 A. 854 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1931)
Hinckley v. City of Danbury
70 A. 590 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1908)
Zeider v. Town of Woodbridge
11 Conn. Super. Ct. 539 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1943)
Duchemin v. Boston Elevated Railway Co.
66 L.R.A. 980 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1904)
Donovan v. Hartford Street Railway Co.
29 L.R.A. 297 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Conn. Super. Ct. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/egan-v-connecticut-co-connsuperct-1943.