Maxfield v. Maine Central Railroad

60 A. 710, 100 Me. 79, 1905 Me. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 13, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 60 A. 710 (Maxfield v. Maine Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxfield v. Maine Central Railroad, 60 A. 710, 100 Me. 79, 1905 Me. LEXIS 31 (Me. 1905).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This was an action to recover damages for a personal injury which the plaintiff sustained on the 22nd of December, 1902, by slipping on the platform at Newhall station in the town of Windham, on the mountain division of the defendant’s railroad, as she was walking from the station door to the cars for the purpose of taking the morning train to Westbrook. It is alleged in her declaration that this platform had negligently been allowed to remain covered with ice in the line of travel from the door of the station to the cars, and had thereby been rendered slippery and dangerous for passengers having occasion to walk over it for the purpose of entering or leaving the car.

It was not in controversy that on the morning in question, the plaintiff entered the station, purchased a ticket for the eight o’clock train from Newhall to Westbrook, and attempted to walk across the platform for the purpose, of entering the caí’, when she slipped upon the platform and fell, severely spraining her ankle. The jury [81]*81rendered a verdict in her favor for $1158.35, and the case comes to this court on the defendant’s motion to set the verdict aside as against the evidence.

Upon the question of the defendant’s liability, the principal controversy between the parties was one of fact, respecting the precise condition of the platform at the time and place of the accident on the morning of December 22d.

It appears from the testimony of the clerk of the weather bureau at Portland, that a light snow had fallen there in the afternoon of the day before, changing to rain at 3.16 p. m., and that the rain continued to fall more or less during the night, ceasing at 5.20 on the morning of the 22d. It also appears, from this record that the temperature at Portland on Sunday the 21st was fifteen degrees below the freezing point in the morning, the average during the day, and when the rain began to fall in the afternoon, being substantially at the freezing point. On Saturday the 20th, it was ten degrees below the freezing point in the morning, the highest during the day being one degree above at two o’clock in the afternoon. It was six below at eight o’clock in the evening. At eight o’clock on the morning of the 22d, at the time of the accident, the temperature at Portland appears to have been eleven degrees above the freezing point.

It is contended, however, that this record of the temperature at Portland is by no means conclusive evidence of the temperature at Newhall, twelve miles farther inland, and even if it were, it is insisted that the temperature above shown is not necessarily inconsistent with the contention that on the platform of the Newhall station at the time of the accident there was in fact a thin coating of ice which had formed during the continued cold weather prevailing during the two preceding days. It is further said that the plaintiff’s claim on this point is strengthened by uncontradicted testimony in her behalf, that prior to the freezing weather of Saturday and Sunday, the 20th and 21st, water had been dripping from a defective or obstructed gutter at the edge of the roof projecting over the platform and that the mixture of snow and water, colloquially termed “slush” found on the platform that morning and not wholly removed by the station agent’s [82]*82shovel, tended to conceal the icy and slippery condition previously created and then existing.

On the other hand, the defendant as earnestly contended that there was no ice whatever on the platform at the time of the accident, that an hour before it happened, the station agent found about half an inch of “slush” there and scraped it off with a large shovel, leaving the platform wet, but with only such “slush” upon it as the shovel failed to reach by reason of the inequalities of the surface. The defendant also claimed that it sufficiently appeared from the plaintiff’s own testimony and that of her son that the leaking of the gutter, if any, near the door of the station could not have caused any coating of ice at the edge of the platform where the plaintiff fell.

Upon this issue of fact the testimony was conflicting. The plaintiff’s positive testimony that there was a coating of ice upon which she slipped and fell and that no sand or ashes had been sprinkled upon it is emphatically corroborated by her daughter-in-law, who states that she remembers the difficulty with which they picked their way along in passing from- the station door to the cars, although they both wore rubbers over their shoes.

Four other witnesses apparently disinterested, give clear and unequivocal testimony that there was a coating of ice on the platform with a little slush or snow and water on top of it; two of them state that it was icy and slippery and that they experienced difficulty in walking safely over it.

In behalf of the defendant, four of its employees, the station agent, conductor, brakeman and carpenter, state postively that while the platform was wet and in some places partially covered with a little slush, there was no ice upon it. One other witness for the defendant testified that there was not a particle of ice on the platform, and two of them testify that they didn’t see any ice, but admit that the platform was slippery. There is no claim on the part of the defendant that the precaution of sprinkling sand or ashes on the platform had been exercised by his agents to prevent passengers from slipping upon it in walking from the door of the station to the cars.

Whether this evidence warranted a finding that there had been a breach of duty on the part of the defendant towards its passengers, [83]*83was a question which was submitted to the jury under instructions to which no exceptions were taken.

It has been seen that at the time of the accident the plaintiff had purchased her ticket for Westbrook and that the relation of carrier and -passenger had been fully established between her and the defendant company. Rogers v. Steamboat Co., 86 Maine, 261. She was then entitled to the care and protection of its servants. But a great variety of terms have been employed by different courts and law writers to express the nature and extent of the obligation due from carriers to passengers under such circumstances. In the actual transportation of passengers, common carriers are required by public policy and safety to exercise the highest degree of care consistent with the business in which they are engaged. They are required to do all that human care, vigilance and foresight can do under the circumstances considering the character and mode of conveyance, to prevent accident to passengers. Libby v. M. C. Railroad Co., 85 Maine, 34. But the standard recognized by law is that of ordinary care with respect to the exigencies of the particular case; and the “standard by which to determine whether a person has been guilty of negligence is the conduct of a prudent, careful or diligent man.” Bigelow on Torts, p. 261.

In view of the great peril involved in the transportation of passengers by steam railways, a very high degree of vigilance, foresight and skill is required to fill the measure of ordinary care in order to prevent accident and injury. So with respect to the duty owed to the passenger on the platform of the railway station, the company is required to exercise ordinary care for the protection and safety of a passenger in that situation but it is obvious that different precautions and safeguards and a less degree of skill and foresight may be sufficient to meet the requirements of ordinary care under those circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
60 A. 710, 100 Me. 79, 1905 Me. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxfield-v-maine-central-railroad-me-1905.