Morrison v. Erie Railway Company

11 N.Y. 302
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 11 N.Y. 302 (Morrison v. Erie Railway Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. Erie Railway Company, 11 N.Y. 302 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

Folger, J.

The plaintiff was a paying passenger upon the cars of the defendant, and it owed her the duty of taking her [305]*305up, carrying her and setting her down safely, so far as it was concerned therein.

There was testimony in the case, at every stage of the trial,upon which the jury had a right to rely; and relying, upon which they had a right to find, that the train on which she was, did not stop at the station, at which she was to be set down, long enough for her to alight with ease and safety. Hence, the plaintiff" made out so much of her case as- consisted in showing that the defendant was negligent in its duty toward her.

There are undisputed facts in the case, however, which raise other important questions.

As the train approached the station at which she was to be set down, the conductor called out the name of it and then the train stopped. This was a notice and an invitation for her to get out. It was further notice that it was time to alight, and that time enough would be given- therefor. The plaintiff and her parents, in whose care she was, prepared to do so, gathered their packages, and were- on their feet in the passage-way between the seats. Tip-to this time it cannot be said that either party was lacking in due care. Before they got outside of the car, however, the train started sharply, and moved slowly by the station. In this, as before said, was the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff, her father and her mother, while they were yet inside the ear, knew that the train was moving; as she was of tender years and immediately under their care- and control, their acts and conduct were her acts and conduct, and she is to be judged thereby. The train still moving, they passed out of the car on to its platform. It was evening and was dark. The train had passed away from the stationary platform, built at the side of the track, and on a level or nearly so, with the platform of the car. To reach the earth from the latter, a person must go down from off the steps thereof, still lower, on to the ground. He must for a space of time be in the air, without support either by hand or foot; he must, in fact, fall or drop- from the moving train to the ground, with [306]*306the momentum downward of his weight, and the momentum forward, got from the motion of the car, these two not in accord. This the father of the plaintiff undertook to do ; not only with his own weight making the descent alone, but holding the body of the plaintiff under one of his arms, having but the other to sustain and guide himself, thus laden ; holding fast with his other hand to the railing of the car. He did this aware that there was danger in it. It was because he knew that it was dangerous, that he would not let the plaintiff undertake it alone, by reason of the train being in motion. He was not directed nor advised to attempt thus to alight; on the contrary, he was told not to; though he had then got so far in it as to .have lost his balance, to be unable to recover himself and retake his step. He fell, still holding the plaintiff, and she was injured. "Upon this state of facts, the defendant, by motion for nonsuit, and by exceptions to the charge given and to the refusals to charge, presents the question whether the plaintiff is chargeable with negligence contributory to the accident. The learned counsel for the defendant claims that the facts are such, as that as a matter of law, contributory negligence is shown, and that there was not a question of fact for the jury. He insisted that as matter of law, it is always negligence and want of ordinary care, for a person to attempt to get from .off a car when it is in motion. Were I disposed to accede to this proposition upon principle, which I am not, I should feel myself precluded by prior decisions of this court, and influenced to a contrary conclusion by those of other courts. (Filer v. N. Y. C. R. R., 49 N. Y., 47, and cases cited; Penn. R. R. Co. v. Kilgore , 32 Penn. St., 292.) The rule established, and as I think the true one is, that all the circumstances of each case must be considered, in determining whether in that case, there was contributory negligence or wait of ordinary care, and that it is not sound to select one prominent and important fact, which may occur in many cases, and to say, that being present, there must as matter of law have been contributory negligence. The [307]*307circumstances vary infinitely, and always affect and more or less control each other. Each must be duly weighed, and relatively considered, before the weight to be given to it is known. This is not to say, however, that in every case, it is a question for the jury of fact, or of fact and of law to be given to the jury with instructions. Where the facts are undisputed, the question of contributory negligence may become one of law, as the other questions which arise upon a trial, and are submitted to the decisions of the court on a motion for a nonsuit or otherwise. In this case, there are certain facts as to which there is and can be no dispute; and they are of such character and weight, that it is for the court to say, whether there is room for doubt or query, but that there was a complete absence of that care and prudence, without which in the direction of conduct, there is negligence. I am aware that it has been held more than once in this court, and more than once in other courts, that though an injury has been received by a passenger in alighting or passing from a car while it is in motion; yet it was a question for the jury to answer, whether there was a lack of ordinary care under all of the circumstances. (McIntyre v. N. Y. C. R. R., 37 N. Y., 287; 49 id., supra, and cases cited.) In those cases, the passenger was not left alone, to his own judgment and discretion. A direction, or notification of some employe of the defendant, having authority or place upon the train, came in to influence the mind of the passenger, to remove apprehension of danger, to induce a sense of safety in action, and a failure to exercise the prudence which the occasion demanded; and it was as if the defendant had assumed the control and responsibility of the act; and so, there being no responsible volition by the passenger there was no damnifying negligence. And there, it was under the pressure of these affecting and controlling circumstances in the case, that the question was left to the jury to determine whether there was a failure to exert ordinary care and prudence. So in Foy v. L. B. & So. C. R. Co. (18 Com. Ben. [N. S.], 225) the porter of the defendant directed the [308]*308alighting of the passenger where there was no platform. And that stress is to be laid upon this circumstance, is shown by the judgment in Siner v. G. W. R. Co. (L. R. [3 Exch.], 150; affirmed [Exch. Ch.], 4 id., 117). Though in Penn. R. R. Co. v. Kilgore (32 Penn. St., 232) there was no such fact; yet there were facts, which made the case quite unlike that here, and so characterized it as to render it appropriate to commit it to a jury. There, the passenger was a woman in feeble health, -in a strange place, with her three young children in her charge. At dusk, the train had stopped at the station to which she had taken passage. She and her children had left their seats and passed out while the train was at a stand-still; two of the young folks had passed off; she was on the steps of the car with the other; by the starting of the cars, that one was thrown prone upon the station platform ; at the instant, she leaped upon that platform and was hurt.

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Related

McIntyre v. . New York Central R.R. Co.
37 N.Y. 287 (New York Court of Appeals, 1867)
Nichols v. . Sixth Avenue R.R. Co.
38 N.Y. 131 (New York Court of Appeals, 1868)
Finch v. . Parker
49 N.Y. 1 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
H.M. Filer v. . New York Central R.R. Co.
49 N.Y. 47 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.Y. 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-erie-railway-company-ny-1874.