Lucas v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.

33 Wis. 41
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 33 Wis. 41 (Lucas v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucas v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., 33 Wis. 41 (Wis. 1873).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed at the January term, 1873.

LyoN, J.

If tbe relation of carrier and passenger existed between these parties at the time the plaintiff was injured, the instructions which the learned circuit judge gave the jury on the subject of negligence are applicable to the case, and doubtless state the law correctly. At least they contain nothing of which the defendant can justly complain. The substance of all the instructions on this subject is to the effect that both the plaintiff, or those having the charge of him, and the employees of the defendant in charge of the train, were under a legal obligation to use ordinary care to avoid the accident; that ordinary care is that degree of caution which persons of ordinary prudence would exercise under like circumstances; that if the plaintiff, or those having charge of him, failed to exercise that degree of care, and if such failure contributed to the injury received by the plaintiff, he could not recover in the action, even though the negligence of the employees of the defendant also contributed thereto ; but that if the injury to the plaintiff was caused by the want of such ordinary care on the part of the employees of the defendant, the plaintiff and those having the charge of him being free from negligence, then, if the plaintiff occupied towards the defendant the relation of a passenger, he was entitled to recover. The foregoing is believed to be a fair statement of the substance of the instructions to the jury on the subject of negligence, and it is not deemed necessary to set out the same at length.

There was sufficient testimony on the trial tending to show that the injury was caused by the negligence of the employees of the defendant in charge of the train, to make such instructions applicable to the case; and there was not sufficient evidence to justify the court in holding, as a proposition of. law, that the persons who had the charge of the plaintiff were guilty of negligence which contributed to the injury. The verdict necessarily negatived the existence of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff or those in charge of him, and affirmed that the injury was solely the result of the [49]*49negligence of the employees of the defendant. Sucb are tbe inevitable presumptions or inferences which, in view of the testimony and the charge of the court, must be deduced from the verdict for the plaintiff. It is not claimed that the plaintiff can recover unless the relation of passenger and carrier existed. The controlling question in the case, therefore, is, whether the plaintiff, at the time he was injured, was lawfully a passenger on the train of the defendant; or rather, does the testimony tend to prove that the plaintiff was lawfully on the platform of the caboose as a passenger on defendant’s train at the time he was thrown off and injured ?

Upon this question, the circuit court refused to give the following instructions proposed by counsel for the defendant:

“ 1. To constitute the relation of a passenger of the defendant, it béing conceded that there was no express contract and no ticket bought, the train in question must be proved to be a passenger train used for the carrying of passengers.
“ 2. If the train in question was not such passenger ti’ain, but merely a freight train, and the regulations of defendant were that passengers were not allowed to be carried in such trains, then the plaintiff had no right to enter upon the train, and defendant can not be made responsible, unless the employees in charge of the train knew of his presence and were guilty of negligence in view of such knowledge. And if the employees in charge of the train had no knowledge of plaintiff’s presence on the caboose, or reason to believe he was there, and coupled the train in the usual manner, the plaintiff cannot recover.
“ 3. If the employees of the defendant were prohibited from canying passengers on the train, then defendant cannot be held liable in this case unless the plaintiff has shown that some person, having authority so to do, authorized plaintiff to enter upon the train
“ 4. The occasional carrying of passengers upon a freight train proved on the part of the plaintiff in case to have occurred but twice, does not make it a passenger train and [50]*50authorize passengers to enter upon it, if the regulations of the. company prohibited it.
“ 5. If this train was a freight train, without any passenger car attached, and the regulations of the company prohibited the taking of passengers thereon, then the acts of the conductor, in some few instances, in taking fare of and carrying passengers would not authorize the plaintiff to attempt to enter the car as a passenger.
“ 6. If the train was not a train for the carriage of passengers, the defendant is not liable, unless the employees of the train were guilty of gross negligence in coupling the train.
“ 7. There is no proof in this case of the relation of passenger by the plaintiff to defendant, and hence he cannot recover.”

The court gave to the jury the following instructions on the same subject:

“ 1. The plaintiff cannot recover as a passenger of defendant, without showing that he occupied that relation to the defendant.
“2. If you should find from the testimony that the night freight train in question was usually made up and started from the place where it stood when the party having charge of the plaintiff attempted to go on board, and that the defendant company, its agents or servants, had,' previous to and about that time, carried such passengers in this night train, to and from Madison, as went aboard of their own accord, or- upon application to some person having charge of the train, collecting from such person the usual fare of passengers, and further find that the caboose on the night in question, and at the time the party having charge of the plaintiff went aboard, was open for passengers, you will be warranted in finding a verdict for plaintiff; if you still further find the absence of negligence upon the part of said party in the care bestowed upon the boy, and the existence of negligence at the time upon the part of the employees of the defendant having charge of the train. [51]*51And I will Rere add, that unless you do find the existence of the facts to which I have above alluded, I hardly see how, in view of the evidence, you are to find a verdict for the plaintiff, unless you find that they went aboard by direction of an employee of the defendant, having authority to give such direction, without negligencé on their part.
“3. If, previous to and upon the night in question, this train had been and was carrying passengers and receiving fare, and you should believe from all the facts and circumstances that the party, in consequence of it, went there to take it, they were neither tresspassers nor outlaws. And if they were conducting themselves in a prudent manner in attempting to get aboard the train, and the boy was injured in consequence of the want of ordinary skill and care upon the part of the employees of the defendant, the defendant is liable.”

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Bluebook (online)
33 Wis. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-milwaukee-st-paul-railway-co-wis-1873.