Flint & Pere Marquette Railway Co. v. Stark

38 Mich. 714, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 170
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 38 Mich. 714 (Flint & Pere Marquette Railway Co. v. Stark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint & Pere Marquette Railway Co. v. Stark, 38 Mich. 714, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 170 (Mich. 1878).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

The defendant in error as administrator of Julia B. Stark brought suit against the railway company under the statute which gives an action to the personal representative of one whose death has been caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default of another. The death occurred at East Saginaw in September, 1875, in consequence of falling or being thrown under the cars while making the attempt to get upon them.

We learn from the record that the State fair wras being held at East Saginaw at the time of the accident, and that the deceased, who was the wife of the plaintiff, had gone from her home in Birch Run to attend it. She expected to return by the ears of defendant, and the train she intended to take was advertised to leave at five o’clock. Some time before that hour the company’s servants were engaged in moving cars and engines about the tracks, making up trains for freight and passengers. At fifteen minutes past four o’clock, and perhaps somewhat later, a train with engine attached was standing by the platform where passengers were accustomed to take the cars, and upon some of the cars were placards announcing that that train was for Flint and other points in the direction of Birch Bun. The putting of these placards on the ears appears to have been a mistake, as the train was not intended for the south; and they were taken off when attention was called to them, though not until after the accident had occurred. Mrs. Stark seeing the train standing by the platform, and apparently sup[716]*716posing it to be the one she should take, started in haste to get aboard. The evidence all indicates that she was exaitecl with the fear of being left. She was quite a large woman, fifty-six years of age, and was seriously encumbered with luggage, but with her left hand she took hold of the guard about the platform of one of the cars, and made the attempt to get aboard, a man on the platform taking hold of her right hand to assist her. The witnesses disagree as to whether the train was in motion before she made this effort, the defendant’s witnesses testifying that it was, while the plaintiff’s witnesses gave evidence that the train was moved with a sudden jerk just as Mrs. Stark lifted her foot to step upon the platform. Either because of the motion, or because Mrs. Stark’s foot was caught in her dress, as some of the witnesses thought, the man who was endeavoring to assist her lost his hold, and she fell beneath the cars and was run over.

There was no dispute whatever that when the accident occurred it was still some time before the cars should leave; the lowest estimate placing it at twenty minutes. It seems also to have been proved beyond controversy that servants of the railway company called out several times to persons who seemed disposed to get upon the cars, that this train was not the train for them to take. There was also evidence from a number of witnesses that Mrs. Stark when eagerly rushing for the cars was expressly told by them or by others in their hearing that it was not yet time for the train to go, and. was warned against the attempt to get aboard; but the jury for some reason put aside all this evidence, and expressly found that she was not warned at all. That she was excited, anxious and eager to get aboard in haste is not left in doubt by the evidence, and this eagerness it is somewhat difficult to account for except upon the theory of the defendant, that the train was actually in motion when she made the attempt, and that she feared being left. Several persons noticed her [717]*717actions, and appear to have been alarmed for her safety.

The questions of law made on the argument are first, .Whether a prima facie case of negligence was made out against the railway company, and if so, then second, Whether a right of action is precluded by contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate.

Negligence consists in the failure to observe that degree of care which the law requires for the protection of the interests likely to be injuriously affected by the want of it. In making out negligence, the first requisite is to show the existence of the duty which has been neglected. That duty is necessarily set out in the declaration, .and the neglect averred, and a failure to prove it is a failure to make out the plaintiff’s case. The duty a breach of which is relied upon in the present case is set out in the declaration as follows:

“ The plaintiff says that on the 17th day of September, A. D. 1875, the said Julia B. Stark, deceased, in her lifetime, being at East Saginaw, was desirous of being carried by said defendant, in and on its train of cars, as a passenger, from East Saginaw to Birch Bun, in said county, and Said deceased was ready aixd willing to pay the usual price or fare to said company for such carriage, and the plaintiff avers that said defendant was willing to carry said deceased, and all others who wished to be so carried, and for the purpose of carrying said deceased, and all others who were desirous of being carried by defendant; said defendant, on the 17th day of September 1, A. I). 1875, caxxsed a train of its cars to be drawn to its station at the city of East Saginaw, in said county, at or near the place where the fair of the Michigan State Agricultural Society was thexx being held in said city, for the purpose of receiving in and upon its said train, for carriage from East Saginaw to Birch Bun, said deceased and others who wished to be carried by said defendant, and plaintiff avers that it thereupon became and was the duty of defendant, to allow and permit the said deceased, and all others who wished to enter upon said train, to do so before the same should be started, and while standing still so they could safely enter upon said train, and said plaintiff avers that while said deceased, with the consent and permission of said defendant, with all due care and diligence on her part, was entering upon one of the cars of said train, for the purpose aforesaid, said [718]*718defendant negligently and carelessly caused the said train, on which deceased was then entering, to be violently and suddenly started, jerked and moved, by means whereof such deceased, while in the exercise of proper care and diligence, was violently thrown from the car on which she was entering at the time said train was so suddenly started, jerked and moved, and was thrown onto the ground between the car on which she was about entering and the car behind that one, and the car behind the one she wras so entering ran over her, and she was thereby then and there killed.”

Here the duty supposed to have been neglected is very plainly and specifically described, and it is seen to have consisted in the duty to receive the intestate with care upon the train then drawn up to the platform, on her offering herself for the purpose.

Whether any such duty was incumbent upon the railroad company must depend first, upon whether the train mentioned was the one intended for the particular trip, and second, upon its being then ready for the receipt of passengers upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Mich. 714, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-pere-marquette-railway-co-v-stark-mich-1878.