Little Rock Railway & Electric Co. v. Sledge

158 S.W. 1096, 108 Ark. 95, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 21, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 S.W. 1096 (Little Rock Railway & Electric Co. v. Sledge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Little Rock Railway & Electric Co. v. Sledge, 158 S.W. 1096, 108 Ark. 95, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 88 (Ark. 1913).

Opinions

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts). 1. In Hot Springs St. Ry. Co. v. Johnson, 64 Ark. 420, an instruction was given by the trial court which told the jury that “the rights of persons to pass along, over and across the streets where defendant company’s tracks are laid are equal with those of said defendant.” This court, passing upon the above declaration of law, said: “The tracks of street railways, including crossings, as well as every other portion of their tracks traversing the public streets of cities and towns, are used by the cars of such companies in common with the traveling public. No one is a trespasser for going upon their tracks. But, while this is true, the' traveling public does not have equal rights with the railway company to the use of the tracks for passing along or crossing over same. ‘Equal’ is not the word. The street cars, ex necessitate, must have, and do have, a right-of-way on their tracks, where they aloné can travel, and this right is superior to that of ordinary vehicles and travellers. This paramount or better right to the use of their tracks does not give them the right to exclude travellers, and these may move along or across these tracks at any time and place where such travelling does not interfere with the progress of the cars. Where there is a conflict, the individual traveller must yield the right-of-way. This requirement of the law is to subserve the public convenience and accommodation. As was said by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, it would be unreasonable that'a car load of passengers should be delayed by the unnecessary obstruction of the street railway track by every passing vehicle, horseman or footman. It is true that the travelling public and the street railway company has equal rights in using the public street. * * * But it is not correct to say that the right of the general public to use that particular portion of the public street covered by the street railway track is equal with that of the street railway company.”

The opinion in the above case does not disclose whether the injury to Johnson occurred at a street crossing, but this was wholly immaterial. The relative rights of street railway companies and pedestrians with reference to the use of that particular portion of the public street covered by the street railway tracks are precisely the same at crossings as elswhere.

The doctrine announced in Railway v. Johnson, above, is the outgrowth of a usage so universal and long continued as to ripen into law. Its object, as stated, is to subserve the public convenience. The reasons for the rule are: First, that street cars can only proceed along their tracks, whereas pedestrians, equestrians and travellers by vehicle may easily use other portions of.the street, and may readily stop or change their course. Second, the street cars, on account of their weight, momentum and motive power, can not be so easily stopped or controlled as travellers by other methods. Third, they are operated to afford the general public rapid transit, which would be greatly impeded unless, in cases of conflict, they have the right-of-way in the use of their tracks.

It is obvious, from all these considerations, that there can be no well grounded distinction between the relative rights of street railway companies and pedestrians and other travellers at crossings and between' crossings as to the use, in case of conflict, of that portion of the street covered by the car tracks. Since the public convenience is to be subserved, there is all the more cogent reason for applying the rule announced at crossings, in cities like Little Rock, for at crossings the public travel is more likely to be congested unless the rule is rigidly observed.

The authorities almost unanimously hold that street railway companies have the paramount or preferential right-of-way over other travellers in the- use of their tracks between street crossings. But there are adjudicated cases, and standard writers upon street railway law, that declare that street railways do not have the superior right-of-way on their tracks over other travellers at street crossings. Such authorities declare that at crossings neither has a superior right-of-way to the other. They say the car has a right to cross and must cross the street, and a vehicle or pedestrian has the right to cross and must cross the railway track; that their rights in this respect are equal, etc. Booth on Street Railways, § 304; Nellis on Street Railways, § 388; O’Neal v. Dry Dock, E. B. & B. R. Co., 129 N. Y. 125, 29 N. E. 84, and other cases cited in note; White in Supplement Thompson on Negligence, volume 7, § 1376; 2 Thompson on Negligence, § 1392; Joyce on Electricity, § 589.

But, while it is true that each has the equal right to cross, it by no means follows, and it can not be true, that each has the equal right to pass over the tracks at the same time where there is a conjunction in their line of travel. Necessarily, one or the other would have to yield, in case of conflict, or the public travel would be completely blocked.

We believe that the authorities which concede that street railway companies have the preferential right-of-way over their tracks between crossings, but which at the same time deny them this right at crossings, and which loosely declare that the rights-of-way over the railway track are equal at crossings, are all illogical and unsound. They ignore, or fail to discriminate between, the equal rignt to the use of the street as a public highway and the relative rights of each as to the use of that particular portion of the street occupied by the street car tracks. They overlook entirely the object of the rule of law stated in Railway v. Johnson, supra, as well as the reasons upon which it is based. The reason generally assigned by them why street railway companies have the preferential right-of-way between crossings is because pedestrians and other travellers may easily stop or turn aside from the railway track, whereas the cars can not do so. But this is only one reason for the preferential right between crossings. In assigning this as a reason, the other reasons, viz.: The difference in motive power, weight and momentum of the car, and the greater difficulty on that account in stopping and starting the same, are overlooked.

In the absence of statute or ordinance prohibiting it, travellers may cross the tracks of street railways anywhere between crossings as well as at the crossings, though at the intersection of streets the crossing by travellers is ‘much more frequent. The reasons given for the preferential right-of-way between crossings all exist as well at crossings, and a fortiori the rule should apply there in order that the general public may not be discommoded.

Answering the contention that the rule of preferential right-of-way in favor of the street car does not apply at street crossings, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in Stafford v. Chippewa, etc., 85 N. W. 1036, 1044, said: “That doctrine has been fully considered and rejected by this and by most courts. If it were to prevail as a measure of relative rights of a person operating a street car and a traveller upon the street, then each might run a race with the other, and the one that arrived at the crossing first demand as a matter of right that his contestant give way for him to pass. Such a system would greatly interfere with the execution of the public purposes for which street railway franchises are granted. ’ ’ The court concludes the discussion with a clear announcement and strong approval of the doctrine we have stated.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 1096, 108 Ark. 95, 1913 Ark. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-rock-railway-electric-co-v-sledge-ark-1913.