Fels v. East St. Louis & S. Ry. Co.

275 F. 881, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2296
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 3, 1921
DocketNo. 5731
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 275 F. 881 (Fels v. East St. Louis & S. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fels v. East St. Louis & S. Ry. Co., 275 F. 881, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2296 (8th Cir. 1921).

Opinions

LEWIS, District Judge.

This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries received by Fels while he was attempting to get aboard one of defendant’s street cars, caused, as he alleged, by the sudden starling of the car. There was verdict and judgment against him. He saw one or two persons standing at a street crossing in East St. Louis as if they were waiting for an approaching car, and believing it would stop he ran to catch it. It did stop and those who were waiting got aboard. As Eels ran in the direction the car was going he left the sidewalk and went into the street and the car passed him, so that he was behind it when it stopped. But he continued to run and [882]*882seized the handle at the entrance which was on the side of the car near its rear end, with one hand, as it was about to start, or after it had started, was thrown violently to the ground by the motion of the car, and received the injuries of which he complains and for which the jury by its verdict found the defendant not liable.

[1] There was no evidence that Fels was seen by the conductor or motorman on the car. The car was not identified, it went on, and it negatively appears that Fels was not seen by them. The defendant met the point by calling the motormen and conductors on three cars that passed nearest the time fixed by Fels as the time when the accident occurred. Each of them testified that he did not see Fels and knew nothing about the accident. These cars followed each other at intervals of fifteen minutes on regular schedule. Fels objected to the motormen and conductors on the three cars testifying, and assigns as error the action of the court in permitting them to do so. This conten-, tion seems to be wholly without merit. Apparently it was the only way open to the defendant to show* negatively though it be, that the motorman and conductor did not see Fels and did not know that he desired to take passage or that he had attempted to do so. The other errors assigned and relied on relate to the giving of instructions and refusal to give others.

All of the facts describing the occurrence, including those already stated, were obtained from Fels and his two witnesses, -the latter looking on at some distance from the car. He testified that he saw but one waiting passenger who got aboard while he was thirty or forty feet away, that the car did not start until he had run that distance, that he was running right next to the track.

“When I got there I just got hold of the handle bar and was coming up with my foot, and that is as far as I know. I fell; they throwed me over, and the car went on. * * * I grabbed the handle of the car and was coming up with my foot, but whether I got my fodt on the steps or not I don’t know. * * * I never got on there, I don’t think. * * * There is a bruised place on my leg here which must have struck the step.”

One of his witnesses testified that two persons boarded the car, that the car was standing still when Mr. Fels got hold of the handle bar, that when the last passenger got on the car Fels was five or- six feet away, still running after it, and the car seemed to start just as Fels got hold of the handle bar. The other one, that only one person boarded the car, that Fels came down the road running and grabbed hold of the right handle bar, and just as he did he fell fiat to the ground.

“He grabbed and got bold of tbe right handle bar, and I couldn’t say now whether his • foot was' on or not, but down he went. * * * Q. And then you say just as he grabbed it the car started and he fell, is that right? A. Yes, sir.”

It thus appears that when the car stopped Fels was not waiting to enter it, was thirty or forty feet behind it and running to catch it, and did not reach the entrance at the side of the car until it.was starting, or an instant before that, and that no one in charge of the car saw him. He must have come up to the entrance suddenly and grabbed the handle bar hurriedly, and was instantly thrown down, before he could [883]*883get his foot on the step. The situation thus presented induced the court to state, in its charge the principies of law applicable to the relation of carrier and passenger, and the duty of the former to the latter.

[2] Was there any evidence, allowing to it every reasonable inference favorable to plaintiff that could he drawn, on which the issue of fact thus submitted could rest? We think not. The place of the accident was not at a station maintained by the defendant for the reception and discharge o£ passengers, but at a street crossing on a public thorofare. We appreciate tlie difficulty under such circumstances in determining when the relation of carrier and passenger begins, and wliat acts of tlie parties are sufficient to create it, as was pointed out in Schepers v. Union Depot R. Co., 29 S. W. 712, 126 Mo. 665. But it was there said, in recognition of the general rule:

“Yet one tosí; applies alike to all, and that is, the relation can only be created by contract between the parlies, express or implied. There must always be an offer and request to be carried on one side, and an acceptance on the other.”

The principle is stated again in Purple v. Railway Co., 114 Fed. 123, 51 C. C. A. 564, 57 L. R. A. 700, in this way:

“A contract is indispensable to the relation of carrier and passenger. " * * This contract of carriage may, it is true, bo express or implied, but if it dons not exist in either form the relation of carrier and passenger cannot have been created.”

And in O’Mara v. Transit Co., 102 Mo. App. 202, 76 S. W. 680:

“The right o£ a person to carriage as a passenger on a street ear rests on a contract, the essential ingredients of which are ¡.hat the person must signify his intention to take passage, either by words or conduct, and the car men must assent, by words or conduct, to his becoming a passenger.”

[3, 4] We are not unmindful that it does not take much to raise the implied contract, and that about all street car travel is under obligations of that sort; and so it is contended that the stopping of the car was an offer to receive all persons who wished to get aboard as passengers, and that Reis accepted the offer by grabbing on to the handle bar for that purpose before the car started, and was injured while trying to enter; and that thus he brought bis case within the principle stated. The contention could not be refuted if Pels had been waiting where the car stopped, or bad presented himself at the entrance before tlie motorman was signaled to start, or if the conductor had known before lie signaled to start that Reis was approaching the entrance nearby with the intention of getting aboard, or by the exercise of a vigilant outlook could have discovered that fact,—and rims in plain view or his presence discoverable by the exercise of reasonable care, the car had been started to his injury while he was in the act of getting aboard with care for his own safety, a verdict for him under those conditions could stand. There is not only no proof to sustain any of those conditions, but the testimony of Reis and his two witnesses establishes the contrary. He was behind the car running after it. The conductor did not see him, nor was he required to know or suspect that he was there. He was not then in the usual place of those whose purpose it is to take passage. He [884]

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Bluebook (online)
275 F. 881, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fels-v-east-st-louis-s-ry-co-ca8-1921.