Fielders v. North Jersey Street Railway Co.

53 A. 404, 68 N.J.L. 343, 1902 N.J. LEXIS 170
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 53 A. 404 (Fielders v. North Jersey Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fielders v. North Jersey Street Railway Co., 53 A. 404, 68 N.J.L. 343, 1902 N.J. LEXIS 170 (N.J. 1902).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, J.

So far as the opinion of the Supreme Court bases the affirmance of the judgment of the trial court upon the theory that the plaintiff, at the time of her injury, was in the exercise of her rights as a passenger in the act of leaving the defendant’s car, it cannot be sustained. Whatever inference might have been drawn from the evidence upon that subject is a matter of no consequence, for no verdict has been rendered against the defendant upon the ground of neglect of any duty that it owed to'the plaintiff as a passenger. .The trial court charged the jury (apparently with the acquies[345]*345mice of plaintiff’s counsel) that the evidence sufficiently showed that the plaintiff had left the car, and, being in safety upon the highway, was thenceforth a traveler upon the highway, and subject to all the duties and obligations imposed upon such travelers; and thereupon proceeded to submit the case to the jury solely upon the question whether the defendant had been guilty of a breach of duty owed by it to the plaintiff as a traveler upon the highway. The verdict and judgment, having gone upon this theory, cannot be sustained upon the theory that the defendant’s conductor had negligently misdirected the plaintiff about alighting from the car and reaching the sidewalk, or had negligently stopped the car at an unsafe and improper place. The defect in the pavement, therefore, instead of being a mere circumstance to be viewed with other circumstances as hearing upon the question of negligence in stopping the car, or negligence in directing tiie plaintiff towards her destination,, becomes the essential fact upon which alone the negligence of the defendant company is to be predicated. And if the judgment can he sustained, it must he upon the ground that the plaintiff has an action against the defendant for a personal injury occasioned by the non-repair of the street pavement while she was a foot passenger upon the street, and irrespective of the consideration that she had ridden upon the defendant’s car.

The defect in question was a deep hole in the street pavement between the rails of the track, and according to the plaintiff’s evidence this was the immediate occasion of her injury. There was evidence tending to show that the hole was the result either of non-repair or improper repair of the pavement, and that it had existed for a sufficiently long time to jut the defendant upon notice, if 'the defendant was bound in law to take notice of the condition of the pavement. Of course if the defendant was under an absolute duty to repair the .pavement, it was at the time under a duty to observe its condition. Therefore, in all aspects the case was one proper for the jury’s consideration, if there existed a legal obligation upon the defendant to repair the pavement.

There is nothing in the ease to show that the pavement in [346]*346question had been’ laid or maintained by the defendant or that the defect resulted from any act of commission on the defendant’s part. Nor is tiñere anything to connect the defect with the defendant’s rails or sleepers, or to show that anything done or omitted in the construction, maintenance or operation of the railway produced the defect. The location of the hole between the rails is a mere circumstance without causative significance. And the only default attributable to. the defendant is the failure to repair.

It is familiar law that a railway company, having the right to lay tracks in a public street, is bound by the general principles of the common law, and without either a specific statute or ordinance, or a contractual obligation, to- lay its tracks in a proper manner, and to keep them in a proper state of repair. 2 Thomp. Negl. (2d ed.), § 1353. But the question of the liability of such a company for failing to keep the surface of the street in repair is quite a different question. Such a liability does not result from the mere fact that the corporation has been vested with a franchise or license of using the public street. The liability to. maintain the pavement as such, if it exists, must either be rested upon some valid statute or ordinance imposing such a duty, or must arise out of the obligations of a contract. It has been repeatedly held that where some burden is lawfully imposed by a municipality upon a street railway company as a condition of the grant of its franchise, the acceptance of such a condition by the company com stitutes a- contract between the eompanjr and the municipality. Wilbur v. Trenton Passenger Railway Co., 28 Vroom 212; Railroad Co. v. Cape May, 29 Id. 565; Cape May v. Transportation Co., 35 Id. 80; Dean v. City of Paterson, 38 Id. 199. Were an ordinance of such a character invoked in the present case the question would remain whether' the plaintiff, having no privity therein, could sue for a breach of its provisions. In Appleby v. State, 16 Id. 165, Mr. Justice Depue, speaking for this court, said: “A duty, the breach of which is an actionable wrong, may arise from a contract or be imposed by positive law, independent of contract. In the first case the party to the contract only can sue; in the [347]*347other case any person injured may sue if he be one of the class of persons for whose benefit the duty is imposed.” The rule here recognized was enforced by the Supremo Court in Marvin Safe Co. v. Ward, 17 Id. 19; Styles v. F. B. Long C o., 38 Id. 413.

But the present case is devoid of evidence to show that any liability for the repair or maintenance of the street pavement was imposed upon the defendant as a condition of its right to exercise its franchise, or that the defendant, by any contract, has undertaken such a duty. The plaintiff introduced in evidence an ordinance adopted by the board of street and water commissioners of the city of Newark September 6th, 1894, purporting to apply to all street railways and imposing upon the operating companies the duty of paving, repaving and repairing the space between the rails. Its terms will be set forth more fully below. Defendant’s duty to repair was rested upon that ordinance alone. The trial court, and also the Supreme Court, treated it as a valid police regulation, imposing an absolute' duty upon the defendant for the general benefit of the traveling public, so that an action would lie at the instance of any traveler injured through a neglect of the imposed duty to repair the pavement. The bills of exceptions clearly raise the question whether a duty of repair was lawfully imposed upon the defendant by the ordinance in question, and whether the plaintiff, as a traveler upon the highway, was one of the class for whose benefit that duty was imposed.

It is certainly well settled that a specific duty, the violation of which is actionable, may arise from a valid statute or municipal ordinance, as well as from the general principles of the common law. Familiar examples among our statutes are the so-called “law of the road” (Gen. Stat., p. 2823, § 91), and the requirement that a railroad locomotive shall sound a bell or whistle on approaching a highway crossing. Gen. Stat., p. 2645, § 29. The books contain many eases arising out of breaches of the latter duty. The duty imposed upon railroad companies “to use all practicable means to prevent the communication of fire from any locomotive engine,” and making them liable in damages to the person [348]*348injured, is an instance. Gen. Stat., p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 404, 68 N.J.L. 343, 1902 N.J. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fielders-v-north-jersey-street-railway-co-nj-1902.