Memphis & Little Rock Railway Co. v. Stringfellow

44 Ark. 322
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 44 Ark. 322 (Memphis & Little Rock Railway Co. v. Stringfellow) 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
Memphis & Little Rock Railway Co. v. Stringfellow, 44 Ark. 322 (Ark. 1884).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Broads”'" fin hands who Rabie aees-

In this action, brought by a passenger to recover damages for personal injuries, the railroad company and its receiver were jointly sued. The complaint alleged that at the time of the injury the road was operated under the management of E. K. Sibley, who was appointed receiver under a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Arkansas. The answer denied negligence and averred contributory negligence in the plaintiff. The following verdict was returned : “We the jury find for the plaintiff and assess the damages at $1,250.” The defendants filed separate motions in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the verdict was general, and did not fasten the liability on either of them. These were both overruled.

The complaint states no cause of action against the railroad company. “ The corporation itself cannot be held responsible for the negligence of servants of a receiver operating the road. The receiver’s possession is not the possession of the corporation, but is antagonistic thereto, and the company cannot control either the receiver or his employes.” Pierce on Railroads, 285; High on Receivers, see. 396; O. & M. R. Co. v. Davis, 23 Ind., 553.

The effect of the misjoinder of these defendants is not, however, to vitiate the verdict as to the receiver. Nothing was alleged in the pleadings and no evidence was given at the trial, showing any liability of the railroad company. And not even at common law in actions for torts was a misjoinder of defendants available to those who were properly sued. The plaintiff might succeed as to some and fail as to others.

A motion for a new trial was filed on the ground of want of evidence to support the verdict, error in the instructions, excessive damages, etc.

The facts, as shown by the bill of exceptions, were as follows : Plaintiff got on the train at Eorrest City, with the intention of going to Brinkley. Just on the outskirts of Brinkley the track of the Texas and St. Louis Railway, popularly known as the “Paramore Road,” crosses the track of the Memphis and Little Rock Railroad. "When the train on which plaintiff was a passenger had arrived within a short distance of the station at Brinkley, the brakeman, as usual, called out the name of the station. The train ran on a few paces further, and arriving at the crossing of the Texas & St. Louis Railway, stopped a few moments, as is customary, before crossing the track of another road. The night was dark. The plaintiff thought he had reached his destination. He arose from his seat, went out on the platform, and looked out on one side. He saw no platform or other indication of a depot, only a bright light ahead, which he took to be the headlight of a locomotive. The plaintiff then went across the platform to the other side. Just at this time the train began to move slowly forward. The plaintiff, supposing that he was about to be carried beyond his station, stepped off, fell and was taken in an insensible condition to a doctor’s shop.

It is contended that, on this state of facts, the plaintiff' is not, as a matter of law, entitled to recover, and that no shadow of negligence is shown.

The appellants rely on the case of Lewis v. London, Chatham & Dover Railway Co., L. R., 9 Q. B., 66; also reported in 7 Moak, 119.

The facts were that plaintiff, a woman, took passage on a train from St. Mary Cray to Bromley. As the train approached Bromley the name of the station was called out, and shortly afterwards the train stopped, but not until it had carried the plaintiff’s car beyond the platform. The plaintiff got up from her seat, and started to descend from the car where it was. Just as she was stepping from the train, it was backed suddenly for the purpose of bringing all the cars abreast of the platform, and the plaintiff fell, and was injured. It was held that she was not entitled to recover.

Mr. Justice Blackburn said: “ It appears that the train was coming up to the station, and some official on the platform called out ‘ Bromley — Bromley ! ’ Calling the name of the station, I understand, and have always understood, to mean this, that it is an intimation to all who are traveling by the train that the station at which the train is about to stop is that particular station. Calling out the name of the station is not an invitation to alight.”

But this case has been virtually overruled by Bridges v. North London Railway Co., Law Rep., 7 H. L., 213; S. C., 9 Moak, 165. The action was tried before the same judge, Blackburn, at nisi prius, and the evidence disclosed a similar state of facts. But the case was withdrawn from the consideration of the jury. This was held to be error. No positive rule of law was laid down as to the effect to be given to calling out the name of a station, but Mr. Baron Pollock, in his opinion before the Lords, concurred in the opinion of Mr. Justice Willes in the same case in the Exchequer Chamber: “ It is an announcement by the railway officers that the train is approaching, or has arrived at the platform, and that the passengers may get out when the train stops at the platform, or, under circumstances induced and caused by the company, in which the man reasonably supposes he is getting out at the place where the company intended him to alight.”

In Weller v. London, etc. Ry. Co., Law Rep., 9 C. P., 126; S. C., 8 Monk's Eng. Rep., 441, on the approach of a train to the station, a porter called out the name of the station and the train was brought to a stand-still. The plaintiff, a season-ticket holder, accustomed to stop there, stepped out of the carriage in which he was seated, and falling upon an embankment was injured. The train had overshot the platform. It was night and there was no light near the spot, and no caution was given, nor anything done to intimate that the stoppage was a temporary one only, or that the train was to be backed. Brett, J., said: “ I agree that to call out the name of the station before the train has come to a stand-still is no evidence of negligence on the part of the company. I also agree that merely overshooting the platform is not negligence. But if the porter has called out the name of the station, and the engine-driver has overshot the station, and the train has come to a stand-still, the company’s servants are guilty of negligence if they do not warn passengers not to alight. At all events the jury may from the facts infer negligence.”

And the best considered American cases are to the same effect. Thus in Central R. R. Co. v. Van Horn, 38 N. J. Law, 133, Beasley, C. J. said:

“ The court would not be warranted in saying that it is not negligence to give notice of the approach to a station, and then to stop the train short of such station, in the night time. Such a course would naturally tend to jeopard passengers, for it would induce them to believe that they had arrived at the station designated, and they would, in the ordinary course, go to the car platform. At night this must be the inevitable result. It is said, in the brief of the counsel of the defendant, that it was right to give the notice at a long distance from the depot, so that the passengers might prepare to leave the cars. This may do when the train is not to stop before it reaches the station. "When a station is called, the passengers have the right to infer that the first stop of the train will be at such station.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Donnally v. Payne
109 S.E. 760 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1921)
Steptoe v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.
177 S.W. 417 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1915)
Holt v. Leslie
173 S.W. 191 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1915)
Kansas City Southern Railway Co. v. Worthington
141 S.W. 1173 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1911)
Devine v. Illinois Telephone Construction Co.
159 Ill. App. 600 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Glossup
114 S.W. 247 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1908)
Diggs v. Louisville & N. R.
156 F. 564 (Sixth Circuit, 1907)
Wolf v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.
111 N.W. 514 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1907)
Eckels v. Farley
131 Ill. App. 557 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1907)
Robinson v. Arkansas Loan & Trust Co.
85 S.W. 413 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1905)
Arkansas Central Railroad v. State
79 S.W. 773 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1904)
Smitson v. Southern Pacific Co.
60 P. 907 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1900)
Archambeau v. New York & New England Railroad
49 N.E. 435 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1898)
Ward v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.
46 N.E. 365 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1896)
Schurr v. Omaha & St. Louis Railway Co.
67 N.W. 280 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1896)
Memphis & C. R. v. Hoechner
67 F. 456 (Sixth Circuit, 1895)
Railway Co. v. Johnson
26 S.W. 593 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1894)
Brockert v. Central Iowa Railway Co.
47 N.W. 1026 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 Ark. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memphis-little-rock-railway-co-v-stringfellow-ark-1884.