Indiana Union Traction Co. v. Smalley

88 N.E. 867, 44 Ind. App. 172, 1909 Ind. App. LEXIS 152
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1909
DocketNo. 6,497
StatusPublished

This text of 88 N.E. 867 (Indiana Union Traction Co. v. Smalley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Union Traction Co. v. Smalley, 88 N.E. 867, 44 Ind. App. 172, 1909 Ind. App. LEXIS 152 (Ind. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Myers, J.

The appellee recovered judgment for personal injuries suffered through the alleged negligence of appellant. The overruling of a motion for a new trial is the only error [174]*174assigned. Under this assignment the appellant questions the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and the correctness of certain instructions given to the jury.

1. The evidence in some material' respects was conflicting. There was evidence upon which the jury might have found that on or before November 10, 1905, appellant was a corporation engaged in operating a system of electric street and interurban railway lines in the city of Marion, Indiana, for the carrying of passengers for hire, and had in its employ as motorman one Oliver. There was a line of the appellant’s railway running south on Washington street in that city to and beyond Thirty-sixth street. It branched at Thirtieth street, one branch running east on that street. Appellee was about fifty years old, and was a meat cutter for Haines & Co., whose place of business was at the northwest corner of Washington and Thirty-sixth streets. He had worked there more than four weeks. He left his home on Tenth street on the morning of the accident in time to catch a car which started about 5 o’clock. He entered that ear at Washington and Tenth streets, paid his fare, and got off at Thirtieth street. A car, called the “College car” was standing there headed south. That was the customary stopping place for the College car and other ears of the appellant, to take on and discharge passengers, as the appellee knew. It was a closed car, having a door and a platform at each end, inclosed by a vestibule. The car was operated by electricity. Oliver, the motorman, was on the car, and he and appellee were acquainted with each other. Appellee, since he had been working for Haines & Co., had ridden with Oliver on his car a number of times. There was a boy on the ear, but no employe of the appellant, except Oliver. There was a conductor for this car, but he was not on it during the time appellee was on the car. There were glass windows between the end platforms and the inside of the car, so arranged that the motorman on the front platform could see most places on the rear platform. It was a [175]*175reversible car, the platforms being substantially alike. Before getting upon the ear the appellee asked the motorman if he was going south, and he answered in the affirmative. Appellee then boarded the car at the north or rear end, and walked through it to the front end. The first thing the motorman said to him was that he had waited on his conductor too long, and would go on without him, and he immediately started the car south. The motorman stopped the ear at an intermediate point, and the boy who was on the car got off. There was no place in or about the car arranged for depositing the fare or tickets of the passengers. No one asked the appellee for any ticket or other compensation. When he got on the car he expected to pay his fare in money, and was able to do so. He never refused to pay his fare. He was acquainted with the duties of conductors on similar cars with reference to taking up fares and assisting passengers. He testified that it was their duty to collect fares, and to signal the motorman to stop and start the cars for passengers to get on and off. The motorman knew where the appellee worked, and while the appellee was standing in the front part of the car, talking with the motorman, the motorman told him to go to the rear of the car and get ready to get off, and he would let him off when he got to Haines’s. Appellee thereupon walked back through the car and out of the door, and prepared to get off. He was standing with both feet on the step of the car on the west side, one step down from the vestibule platform and about twelve inches above the asphalt street. When he went out on the rear platform the car was not quite a square from Haines’s place, and was running at less than ordinary speed. He was carrying a small bucket in his right hand. The ear ran slowly until it was less than one hundred feet north of Haines’s place. Appellee was holding to the handhold on the car with his left hand. The ear jerked, and the jerking caused him to lose his hold, and he was thrown back against the rear end of the car and from thence upon the street. He struck the street at full [176]*176length, his head, he thought, striking first. He was severely injured. The usual stopping place of this and other cars going south was on the south side of Thirty-sixth street, which was about sixty feet wide. It was not yet daylight when he was injured, hut there were lights in the car.

The appellee, in that portion of his brief under the heading of “Points and Authorities,” makes some statements and cites some authorities relating to mere licensees, trespassers and persons attempting to procure transportation under circumstances amounting to fraud upon the carrier; yet in its argument, the appellee concedes that under the circumstances the company owed the appellee ordinary care.

We see no such conclusive indication of fraud as would authorize this court upon such question to set aside the determination of the jury. We are of the opinion that under the facts in evidence the jury was justified in regarding the appellee as a passenger entitled to that high degree of care due from a common carrier of passengers.

2. In instruction four, given at the request of the appellee, it was stated that a carrier of passengers, while not an insurer of the safety of its passengers, is required to exercise the highest degree of care to secure their safety, and it is liable to a passenger, who is himself without fault, for an injury caused by an omission or failure to exercise such care, or for the slightest neglect of duty in this respect; that the passenger is entitled to be carried properly, and it is the duty of the carrier to provide for the safe receiving and discharging of its passengers; that it is bound to exercise the strictest vigilance not only to carry its passengers to their destination, but also to discharge them safely upon their arrival at such destination. Counsel object to the instruction, on the alleged ground that it ignores the rule that the high degree of care required of a public carrier toward its passengers must be consistent with the mode of conveyance, and is the highest practicable degree of care; and, also, that as applied to this ease it proceeds [177]*177upon the assumption that the relation of carrier and passenger existed between the parties when that fact was in dispute. The instruction was a general statement of propositions of law, and assumed no fact as established in this case.

3. The jury scarcely could regard the instruction as directing their consideration to the degree of care applicable to any other kind of conveyance than that to which the case on trial related, for, after the general statement, reference was made to the discharge of passengers at their destination, the very matter involved in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.E. 867, 44 Ind. App. 172, 1909 Ind. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-union-traction-co-v-smalley-indctapp-1909.