Kline v. Cent. Pac. R.R.

37 Cal. 400
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 37 Cal. 400 (Kline v. Cent. Pac. R.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kline v. Cent. Pac. R.R., 37 Cal. 400 (Cal. 1869).

Opinion

By the Court, Sanderson, J. :

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, by reason of his having been, as alleged, wrongfully expelled from the cars of defendant by the conductor while the cars were in motion.

The plaintiff having introduced his evidence and rested, the defendant moved for a nonsuit upon the following grounds:

1st. Because the evidence showed that the plaintiff was guilty of inexcusable carelessness and negligence in running upon the cars while they were in motion.
2d. Because the evidence showed that the negligence and carelessness by reason of which the plaintiff was injured was mutual.
3d. Because the evidence showed that the plaintiff was wrongfully upon the cars, and, therefore, cannot recover for the negligence of the defendant in putting him off.
4th. Because the evidence showed' that the plaintiff was injured solely by the wanton and malicious act of the conductor, for which the defendant cannot be held responsible.

The Court sustained the motion, but did so upon the last ground only. The respondent, however, abandons none of its grounds in this Court.

The plaintiff was examined as a witness in his own behalf. He testified that he was sixteen years of age at the time he sustained the injuries in question, and was then residing near the defendant’s railroad, at the corner of Sixth and F streets, [403]*403in the City of Sacramento. That on the 2d of May, 1866, a passenger train was coining into the city and passing his residence on its way to the depot of the defendant, situated on Front street. That the train was going at a speed of about ten miles an hour. That he ran alongside the baggage car in the direction in which the train was going, caught hold of the iron rail at the stops leading up to the forward platform, and swung himself on to the steps, and thence ascended to the platform and took a position near the brake. That there was ho one upon the platform at the time, but the conductor soon appeared and demanded “what he was doing” or “where he was going.” He replied that he was going down to Front street, whereupon the conductor pushed or shoved him off the train, knocking him senseless. That the cars ran over his right leg, crushing it below the knee in such a manner as to render amputation necessary.

A witness by the name of Clark testified that he was at the plaintiff’s house at the time, and saw him get safely on the car and ride there at least ten yards before the cars passed out of his sight. That it was one hundred and fifty yards, by actual measurement, from the place where the plaintiff' got on to the car to the pl,aco where he fell or was forced off.

A Mrs. Moses, also testified that she saw the plaintiff swing himself on to the car in the manner stated, and was positive that he reached the platform in safety. That she also saw some person come out of the car on to the platform, after the plaintiff had reached it.

It also appeared by the testimony that soon after the accident the conductor visited the plaintiff at his house, to which he had been removed, and that the plaintiff pointed him out as the man who pushed him off the car, and the conductor denied that he did so. It also appeared that the conductor had received strict orders from the defendant to keep boys off the train, and that he had a man at the back end of the train with a club for that purpose. Also, that the conductor, according to his own statement, ordered the plaintiff sharply to get off the cars, telling him he could not be allowed to [404]*404ride, and that he put Ms hand on the plaintiff’s shoulder at the same time.

A witness who was standing upon the platform of the hindmost car and looking forward, saw the plaintiff fall, and also the hands of some person “ coming back” from the person of the plaintiff as he fell. A witness, who saw the plaintiff in the act of falling from the car, testified that he fell forward—that is to say, with Ms face toward the ground.

The foregoing is the substance of the testimony, so far as it illustrates the points made by the defendant on the motion for a nonsuit.

We think the testimony tends to show that the plaintiff did not fall in getting upon the car, and consequently did not receive his injury by reason of his wrongful, careless, and negligent attempt to get upon the car, as a proximate cause. He rode upon the car a distance of nearly one hundred and fifty yards, not merely hanging to it, but standing in safety upon the platform.

Being thus upon the car, did he fall off accidentally', or in attempting to leave voluntarily, or in getting off in obedience to the command of the conductor merely, or was he pushed off by the conductor ? There is no pretense for saying that he fell off accidentally, or that he undertook to get off voluntarily. He must, then, have undertaken to get off because he was told that he could not ride, and was ordered to do so by the conductor, with a show of force; or he must have been with actual force pushed off by the conductor. Hpon either hypothesis, we think, the plaintiff should not have been nonsuited.

Had the plaintiff been a man, or of mature age and discretion, it might be said, judicially, by the Court, that having jumped off the cars merely because he was commanded to do so, he had no one to blame but himself for the injury he sustained; hut being a boy only sixteen years of age, we think it should have been left to the jury to say, whether in his case the sharp command of the conductor, accompanied [405]*405by a show of force, did not, under all the circumstances, amount to compulsion.

Where a boy ten years of age was upon the platform of a street or horse car, under circumstances very similar to those of the present case, and was ordered to get off by the driver, without stopping the car, and did so, and fell, and was run over by the car, the Court said: “ If the plaintiff had been a person of mature age, the mere words of the driver could not have been regarded as equivalent to a forcible ejection of the plaintiff from the car, at a time when it was dangerous to leave it. Por such a person might have exercised his own judgment as to the peril he might incur in attempting to obey the order. But the plaintiff was a child of about ten years of age. His obedience would be naturally expected, without regard to the risk he might incur; and in respect to a child so young, the command would be equivalent to compulsion.” (Lovett v. Salem and South Danvers Railroad Company, 9 Allen, 561.) If this be sound doctrine, and we see no reason to doubt, can there be any period in childhood of which it can be said by the Court judicially,

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Bluebook (online)
37 Cal. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-cent-pac-rr-cal-1869.