Mitchell v. Des Moines City Railway Co.

141 N.W. 43, 161 Iowa 100
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 141 N.W. 43 (Mitchell v. Des Moines City Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Des Moines City Railway Co., 141 N.W. 43, 161 Iowa 100 (iowa 1913).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

Plaintiff claims that on or about the 21st day of June, 1911, she was a passenger on one of defendant’s cars; that the ear on which she was riding stopped at Ingersoll avenue and Twenty-Eighth street for plaintiff to alight; that, while she was in the act of alighting, the car was started without any warning to her or signal from any person to start; that she was thrown to the ground, her left ankle severely injured, and the ligaments, muscles, and nerves surrounding the ankle joint were torn, strained, and broken, and her body severely bruised, and she also sustained a severe shock to her nervous system. Plaintiff further states that, when she was five years of age, she received an injury to her right leg; that, as a result of this injury she has ever since been compelled to use crutches; that when she stands her right foot is suspended while so standing or walking; that, at the time she attempted to leave the car, she was using her crutches, and was standing on the rear platform of the car resting on her left foot; that she placed her crutches on the first step down, and, while she was in this position, the car suddenly moved forward and threw her to the ground with great force [103]*103and violence; that, at the time she was attempting to alight, the conductor on the ear was standing close beside her on the rear platform and did jnot warn her that the car was about to start, and did not assist her to alight, or offer to assist her; that the conductor at the time saw her crippled condition, and was fully aware of the fact that she was so crippled.

Upon the facts so stated, the plaintiff alleges that the defendant was negligent: First. In that the motorman caused the ear on which she was riding to start suddenly, after it had stopped for plaintiff to alight, without any signal to start the car, and without any warning to the plaintiff that it would start before she could alight. Second. That the defendant was negligent in that the conductor, knowing her crippled condition, did not aid and assist her in alighting from the car. The defendant interposed a general denial of these charges. Upon the issues so tendered, the cause was tried to a jury and a verdict returned by the ju,ry in favor of the plaintiff. That thereupon the defendant filed a motion for a new trial which, being submitted to the court, was. overruled, and from the ruling of the court, upon the motion and from the judgment’entered upon the verdict, defendant appeals.

1. Street railways : injury to passenger: negligence: evidence. It appears from the evidence in this case that, at the time plaintiff was injured, she was eighteen years of age; that, when she was about five years of age, she was knocked down and run over by a party riding a bicycle, from which she received injuries to her right hip and joint, and that in consequence thereof she has since been unable to use her right limb; that during all her life, after the first accident, she was compelled to use crutches in walking and getting about; that, prior to this last injury, she had frequently come on street cars from her home; that she had become quite expert in the use of crutches and got around with apparent ease, went up and down stairs without assistance, and had ridden upon street cars two or three times a week since she was thirteen years of age. She testified that she got off and [104]*104on cars without assistance. She says that she could get on better if the conductor had assisted her. On this point she testified as follows, when asked: “Would the fact that one had hold of your arm, or anything of that kind, retard rather than assist you?” She answered:

No, it would not bother me. Q. Has any one ever tried to do that? A. Yes, lots of them have helped me. Q. When did they ever assist you? A. Well, long before I was hurt the last time. They would assist me by taking me by the arm. This would not have a tendency to pull my arm from the crutch. Q. They didn’t ordinarily assist you, did they? A. Well, sometimes they did, and sometimes they didn’t. This would be getting on and off the car. I never told any conductor that I could get off better without assistance. After I was thirteen, I would probably go down two or three times a week, and would go down without assistance. Q. Could you get on and off the cars without assistance? A. Sometimes I would, but not very often without assistance. Q. You don’t mean to say that it was the rule of the conductors to assist you on and off the car? A. They helped me most of the time, simply by catching hold of my arm. I had never asked them to assist me, and never waited for them to give me assistance.

It appears that at this time her home was on Olive avenue. It appears that during the last four or five years she had been accustomed to ride on this line and was familiar with the faces of the conductors who ran on that line. She further testified: “After I became twelve or thirteen years of age, I would go out with my father or my mother and get on and off the cars without assistance. They never assisted me unless I asked them to. I used to go out to Ingersoll Park quite often with my mother, and once in a while without any companion.” With respect to what happened at the time of the injury she testified:

I got on this ear at Twelfth and Grand. As we approached Twenty-Eighth street and Ingersoll avenue I rang the bell to [105]*105get off. As the car approached Twenty-Eighth street, I walked to the back end of the car to the inside door and waited until the ear stopped. When it stopped, I started to get off. I stepped on the rear platform of the car. There were two steps. When I got my crutches down on the step, the car jerked and I fell. It gave a start, like it was starting up. I fell with my ankle under me. My crutches had rubber on the ends. I had used them for about a year. I fell on my left side, struck my left arm, and fell to the north and west.

The conductor testified:

When she came out of the ear, I was on the back platform. I saw her come out from the body of the car, out to the door that leads to the platform. She waited inside of the door for it to stop. She came out of the door after it stopped. I wasn’t engaged in doing anything except standing there on the platform. No other duty to perform. I saw her when she came to, and stood at the door leading to the platform.

There is no dispute in this ease that the plaintiff fell and was injured at the place where she claims she fell and was injured. The only controversy is as to what caused her to fall; she claiming that, as she was about to alight, the car suddenly started or jerked and threw her to the ground; the defendant claiming that the car did not start or jerk, and that, in attempting to get down, she slipped and fell without any culpable act on the part of the defendant for which the defendant could in any way be held liable; and defendants contend that from the very manner of her fall, and that from the position in which she lay after her fall, it was a physical impossibility for her to be thrown where she lay by any forward movement of the car while she was attempting to alight.

The uncontradicted evidence shows that, whatever the cause of her fall, she fell to the north and towards the head of the ear (that is, toward the west). It is true, as a physical fact, that one standing upon the platform of a ear, when the car makes a sudden start or jerk, will naturally be thrown [106]

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.W. 43, 161 Iowa 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-des-moines-city-railway-co-iowa-1913.