Florida Southern Railway Co. v. Hirst

30 Fla. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 30 Fla. 1 (Florida Southern Railway Co. v. Hirst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida Southern Railway Co. v. Hirst, 30 Fla. 1 (Fla. 1892).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.:

This is an action to recover damages received by Walter J. Hirst in a collision between two trains on appellant’s railroad, Hirst being on a passenger train, which was on its schedule time, and the other train being a special, or extra, train loaded with iron rails.

The rule as to negligence announced by this court in Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. vs. Yniestra, 21. [14]*14Fla., 700, is that notwithstanding a person may be guilty of a negligent act from which injury results to another, still if the party injured has by his own negligence contributed to his receiving the injury, he can not recover damages from the other party for such injury. The injury must have been caused solely by the negligence of the former party to entitle the latter to recover. This decision, which we see no reason to •disturb, necessarily, even though impliedly, repudiates the doctrine of comparative negligence, which has found favor in the Illinois and other courts ; and it dispenses with the necessity of our noticing the citations from those States made by appellee’s counsel. The injury in question was received prior to the passage of the act of June 7th, 1887, Chapter 3744, Laws •of Florida, and hence the provision of the first section of this statute as to diminishing damages in proportion to the amount of the default of the plaintiff, where both parties are at fault, has no application.

There is in the cause before us testimony to the effect that ITirst on boarding the train got on the passenger car; and that a rule of the Florida Southern Railway Company, appellant, forbade passengers from riding in any •other than passenger cars, or, consequently, in the express oar, in which car Hirst had gone and ivas at the time of the accident, he being about six feet from the fore end of it, and sitting on the iron express box ; and that the plaintiff knew of such rule ; and also to the effect that this car was next to the engine, and was a more dangerous place than the passenger cars, and was neither set apart as, nor was it in fact, the place [15]*15where, passengers usually rode, and was not arranged for them, nor had any seats, but was for the use of the •express company. Also that the plaintiff had ridden in the express car previously to the trip on the day of the accident in question, and that the conductor had been in there with him a short time, and that plaintiff had gone in there with the conductor and by his permission, or with his, at least, tacit consent; and tending to show that the conductor also knew that the plaintiff was in this car at the time of the collision between the passenger train and the special train loaded with iron rails. It was also testified that there was ample room in the passenger car, and that the plaintiff would not have been injured if he had been in the passenger car, and that he and the express agent were the only ones injured. There was no testimony tending to show that the conductor attempted to enforce the rule, or even suggested to the plaintiff the advisability of its observance, although the conductor says that plaintiff was not in the car by his permission. Hirst had not paid any fare, nor had the conductor applied to him for it.

Exceptions taken by the defendant to charges given to the jury, and to the refusal of one asked by the defendant, involve an inquiry into the legal effect of a railroad company forbidding passengers to ride in parts of the train set apart for other purposes, and naturally more dangerous than passenger cars, and of the power of conductors to waive such rules.

In Railway Co. vs. Moore, 49 Texas, 31, the deceased, [16]*16when he received the injuries from which he died, was riding on a freight train with the knowledge and consent of the conductor, but whether he had paid fare, or had a pass or permit, was not shown. He was the' only person, except the employes of the company, on. tiain, and prior to a month or six weeks before his death, had run on the company’s road for a year or two as an engine driver, and knew that passengers were not allowed to travel on the company’s freight trains, and that officers in charge of such trains were forbidden to allow parties to ride on them without a special pass from the general superintendent of the road, which passes w'ere not given, in view of the increased risk, without a release of the company from liability in cases of accidents to passengers. The decision of the court was that a regulation that freight and passengers shall be carried on separate trains, is-reasonable, and highly salutary to both the company and the public ; and no one has the right to demand that he shall be allowed to ride on trains devoted exclusively to the carriage of freight, when the company makes other and suitable provisions for the transportation of passengers ; and that a party who in violation of such regulation, and without the consent of the company, forces himself into one of its freight trains cannot hold the company responsible to him as passenger, or recover of the company for injury thus contributed to by him while thus wrongfully on the train. That while it might be true that when the company should, notwithstanding such a regulation, habitually permit persons to travel on its freight trains it would [17]*17be liable to such passenger the same as if he were on a regular passenger car ; still when there is such a regulation, and there are no cars attached to freight trains except those ordinarily accompanying trains exclusively of this character, or only such cars as by their appearance or the manner in which they are fitted up, cannot be regarded as inviting persons on freight trains as passengers, the burden of proving that the party injured on such a train was justified in going on it as a passenger is upon him ; and the conclusion of the court was that the evidence showed that the conductor did not have authority to waive the regulation, and that the deceased must have known this.

In Prince vs. I. & Gr. N. R. Co., 64 Texas, 144, the injuries of the plaintiff were alleged to have been received through the negligence of defendant’s employes while he was riding on a hand car on which lie was invited to ride, and on which he was received as a passenger, and that the company sometimes used such car for the transportation of passengers invited to travel on it by the proper agents of the company free of charge; and the questions arose on a demurrer to the petition. The order overruling the demurrer was affirmed, and it was held, that a railway company is liable in damages to one who is injured by the neglige nee of its agents while traveling on a hand ear of i he company, on which he had been invited to ride, bv the agent of the company in charge of the car freo of charge, it appearing that such a car was cometimos used by the company for the transportation of passen[18]*18gers, and not shown that any regulation of the company prohibited traveling on such a car. In the opinion, the effect of the decision in Hallway Co. vs. Moore, supra, is stated to be: That the question whether or not a passenger is lawfully on a train does not depend necessarily upon the purposes to which the train is usually devoted ; if, however, the train is usually employed in the transportation of passengers, a person who has paid his fare, or has been invited to ride free of charge, is presumed to be lawfully on the train.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Fla. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-southern-railway-co-v-hirst-fla-1892.