Howard v. Union Railway Company

65 L.R.A. 231, 57 A. 867, 25 R.I. 652, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 L.R.A. 231 (Howard v. Union Railway Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Union Railway Company, 65 L.R.A. 231, 57 A. 867, 25 R.I. 652, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 150 (R.I. 1904).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

This is trespass on the case for negligence.

The plaintiff alleges that the defendant, by its agents and servants, who were operating one of its electric cars on Academy avenue, a public highway in the city of Providence, removed a mortar-bed, which obstructed its track upon which said car was passing, from the track to the easterly half of the roadway of said avenue at a point near Hendrick street, and that it was the duty of the d'efendant, upon removing said obstruction, to place the same where it would not interfere with and cause damage to travelers lawfully upon said Academy avenue.

The plaintiff then alleges that, while lawfully riding on said avenue upon a bicycle, subsequently to said removal, and while in the exercise of due care, he ran into said mortar-bed, which had been negligently placed on the roadway by the defendant in manner1 aforesaid, and was thrown violently to the ground and injured.

In his second count the plaintiff alleges that it became and was the duty of the defendant, after removing said obstruction from its track to the easterly side of the street, to place a light *653 or some other signal on or near to said mortar-bed, so that persons traveling on said highway in the night-time might be warned of the presence of said obstruction.

At the trial of the case in the Common Pleas Division a verdict was rendered for the defendant by direction of the court, and the case is now before us on the plaintiff's petition for a new trial on the ground that the court erred in directing said verdict.

The material facts of the case, as they appeared in evidence, were these: Shortly before the happening of the accident in question, which occurred at about ten o’clock in the evening of the sixteenth day of June, 1902, some vicious boys or young men had carried the mortar-bed above referred to from a new building near by, and had placed it upon the track of the defendant company, which, at that point, runs along the west side of the street. They then put out the electric light which was near by, so that the place was left in darkness.

Soon afterwards a car of the defendant company came along, and, being unable to get by without removing the obstruction, the conductor and motorman of the car pulled the mortar-bed off the track and left it in the highway, about twenty inches away from the nearest rail, the car then proceeding on its way.

Shortly afterwards the plaintiff, who was riding to his home . on his bicycle, not being able to see the obstruction on account of the darkness, ran into the same and was thrown from his wheel and injured.

A little later a policeman came along, and, finding the mortar-bed near the middle of the street, moved it over to the edgé of the sidewalk and leaned it over the curbing. He then telephoned for assistance, and two men came and took the mortar-bed away from the street and put it upon a vacant lot near by.

In view of these facts, the only question which arises is whether the defendant corporation can be held for the injury which the plaintiff sustained.

The answer to this question depends upon whether the defendant owed any duty to the plaintiff in the premises; that *654 is, whether it owed the plaintiff the duty of either removing said obstruction out of the highway, so that it would have been impossible for the accident in question to have happened, or of giving him some warning of its presence in the highway by means of a light, or otherwise.

The plaintiff contends that such duty was owing to him from the defendant, and that the case, for all practical purposes, stands the same as it would if the defendant had originally placed said obstruction in the highway.

We think this condition is untenable. In removing the obstruction from the car track the defendant was doing what it clearly had the right to do in the management of its business and in the discharge of its duties to the public under its charter and the laws of the State. It was conveying passengers from one point to another for hire, and it could not legally be called upon to even temporarily suspend its business for the purpose of clearing a highway of obstructions so that travelers thereon might not be inconvenienced or injured. Having found an obstruction upon its track, it had the right to remove it therefrom; and the mere fact that it did no more than remove it from its track did not have the effect to render the defendant liable because someone else was subsequently injured by reason of the presence of the obstruction in the street.

All that the defendant did was to remove said obstruction from one part of the highway to another part thereof. It was in no way responsible for the presence of the obstruction in the highway, and its removal from the track, so far as appears, did not add to the danger incident to its presence in the street. But, even if it did, we fail to see that any liability attached to the defendant in the premises.

Meeting with an obstruction in the highway, the defendant had the same right that any ordinary traveler would have in similar circumstances. And who can doubt that such a person has the right, upon meeting with an obstruction in the highway which prevents his lawful progress thereon, to move it aside so as to enable him to proceed? Such a state of things very frequently happens. A stone rolls down from an em *655 bankment and obstructs the traveled part of the road, and a traveler who is passing along at that point finds it necessary, in order to proceed with his team, to roll the stone a little to one side of the way. He does so, and then goes on about his business. Can it be said, with reason, that he owes any legal duty, regarding said obstruction, to another traveler who may follow him on that road at some later period?

Take this illustration: A box or package of merchandise accidentally falls from an express wagon upon, one' of the rails of the street railway company in the night-time, and, being unnoticed by the driver of the team, he passes on and leaves it there. Soon afterwards a car comes along, and the motorman, seeing the object on the track, and seeing that it is of such a size and in such a position that it can be readily pushed from the rail by pressing the fender of the car gently against it, does so, and the obstruction is so far removed as not to interfere with his progress, and he goes • on. Shortly afterwards a carriage comes along, and, it being dark, the driver fails to see the obstruction, and his horse takes fright therefrom and runs away, whereby the driver is thrown from his carriage and injured. Would the street railway company be liable for his injuries? We think not; for the company would owe the driver no legal duty in the premises.

Take another illustration: Some person leaves his carriage in the highway in such a manner as to prevent a person in another carriage from passing without the removal of said first mentioned carriage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 L.R.A. 231, 57 A. 867, 25 R.I. 652, 1904 R.I. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-union-railway-company-ri-1904.