Kalis v. Detroit United Railway

119 N.W. 906, 155 Mich. 485, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 905
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1909
DocketDocket No. 53
StatusPublished

This text of 119 N.W. 906 (Kalis v. Detroit United Railway) 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
Kalis v. Detroit United Railway, 119 N.W. 906, 155 Mich. 485, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 905 (Mich. 1909).

Opinions

Moore, J.

The trial judge in his charge to the jury so nearly covered the questions of fact and law involved in this proceeding that we quote from it as follows:

' “Gentlemen of the jury, in this case, Mary Kalis, as administratrix of the estate of Walter Kalis, deceased, brings suit against the Detroit United Railway, and this suit is brought for the purpose of obtaining damages, resulting to the estate of this boy through his alleged unlawful killing by the defendant. The accident occurred in September, 1906. It appears beyond dispute that this boy on that night, about a quarter to 6, boarded a Baker street car at the corner of Monroe avenue and Woodward in front of the Bagley bust. It appears beyond dispute that the car was full. It was an open car, with a running_ board on each side. It is not disputed that at the time the plaintiff boarded the car, at least the plaintiff’s deceased, that all the seats were filled. The back platform was filled. The outside running board was filled, but that he secured a place upon the inside [487]*487running board. There is no doubt about that fact. The car proceeded upon its way up Monroe avenue until it came to Farmer street, where it was obliged to stop because another street car crosses there. It was what is known as a compulsory stop. There is some testimony tending to show that at that point other passengers boarded the car. After that stop, the car proceeded upon its way out Monroe avenue, and when at the corner of Farrar street, or near that point, a Brush street car, on its way towards the city hall, passed the car upon which the dead boy was riding. As it passed him, it struck him, striking his head and shoulders, knocking him to the ground, and killing him almost instantly. It is not-disputed that this boy at the time of his death was 15 years and 6 months old. That he was engaged in the manufacturing business in the Detroit Screw Works, I think, and was earning at the time of his death $10 per week or slightly more, on an average about $10 a week, I think the testimony shows. It is not disputed that it cost for his maintenance, board, and clothes $3 a week. So that his estate through his death is the worse «if, practically by the amount of the difference between $10 a week and $3 a week, or about $7 a week, if you believe the testimony.
“It is the plaintiff’s claim that this boy came to his death through the negligence of the defendant company, and not through any negligence of his own. If the plaintiff can substantiate that claim, she is entitled to recover a verdict at your hands. I charge you, in the first place, that it was not negligence for this dead boy to take a position upon the running board, if at the time he got upon the car there was sufficient room for him to get upon the board and maintain an upright- position next to the car. The running board is something like 18£ inches — from the outside edge of the running board to the nearest point of the Brush street car was 18^inches, so that standing next to the stanchion there would be at least two feet between the stanchion of the open car and the nearest point of the Brush street car, a space ample for any man to stand in safety, if the cars were operated in an ordinarily careful and prudent manner. • Therefore it would not be negligence for this boy to take position upon the running board; neither would it be negligence, on the part of this defendant company, to permit him to take a place upon the running board. People have ridden upon the inside and outside running boards of these cars for years. There is no [488]*488question that the company permits passengers to ride there, and there is no question that passengers habitually, when the cars are otherwise crowded, take their position upon those boards rather than wait for another car. So I charge you there was no negligence either in the company permitting him to stand there nor in his taking the position, if at the time he took the position there was room for him to get his feet upon the platform and maintain an upright position, standing upon the steps; because if he had that opportunity, and could have maintained that position, then it was a place, while dangerous, yet with the exercise of care upon his part, and due operation of the cars on the part of the defendant, would have been safe. It is the plaintiff’s claim that after this boy boarded the car in front of the Bagley bust, and at the stop made at Farmer street, others were permitted by the defendant company to board the car, particularly upon this running hoard upon which he stood, to such numbers that thereafter he was by other persons crowded out from the body of the car into a position which brought his body or some portion of it where %n oncoming Brush street car came and did strike him; and it is urged by the plaintiff that it was an act of negligence on the part of the defendant company, after the inside running board was so loaded with passengers, including the plaintiff’s deceased, to permit others to get upon that running board and crowd the plaintiff’s deceased out and into a place of. danger. I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, if you find that to be a fact, it would be an act of negligence on the part of defendant company. While it is not' negligence for them to permit people to stand upon the running boards of their cars, I charge you it would be a negligent act for them to permit the running board to be so crowded as to allow oncoming passengers to push those, who had a proper place upon the platform, into a place of danger; and that would be a question of fact for your determination. I charge you that it was this dead boy’s duty, if the running board was so crowded at the time he boarded it, that he could not get his feet upon it and maintain himself in an upright posture — it was his duty to have stayed off the car and waited for the next one. He would be guilty of an act of negligence, which would preclude him from recovery, if when he went to the side of the car he found all the space on the running board filled, and be could only secure a ride by reaching around somebody [489]*489else who had a safe place on board; and, if you find he did that, the mother, as his administratrix, cannot recover. I charge you further, if you find that this young lad, either through carelessness, lack of .attention, or desire to see his companion in front, or for any other reason, voluntarily or involuntarily, or without knowing it, having secured a place of comparative safety, where he could remain upright and escape injury, if he allowed himself to hang out, and was not crowded out by subsequently arriving passengers, his mother cannot recover because that would be such an act of negligence as would preclude his recovery. In other words, gentlemen of the jury, while a passenger has a right to assume a place upon the inside running board of an open car, it imposes upon that passenger the additional duty to maintain himself in safety, and he has got to use such care as would save him from injury, so long as the company is not negligent in its operation of the car.
“There is no testimony in this case that the tracks were in an extraordinary condition, or that the cars were operated in an unusual manner. There is testimony that no bells were rung on either car. I am not prepared to charge you whether that would be an act of negligence or not.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 N.W. 906, 155 Mich. 485, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kalis-v-detroit-united-railway-mich-1909.