Murray v. Boston & Maine Railroad

224 A.2d 66, 107 N.H. 367, 1966 N.H. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 30, 1966
Docket5454
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 224 A.2d 66 (Murray v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 224 A.2d 66, 107 N.H. 367, 1966 N.H. LEXIS 193 (N.H. 1966).

Opinions

Blandin, J.

Mrs. Murray, an active woman sixty-nine years of age and in excellent health, claims that she fell from the bottom step of a car on die defendant’s tram while attempting to board it at Claremont Junction, due as she says, to die fact that the defendant’s trainman negligently failed to assist her. She testified that she asked the trainman to get her bags, which were just outside the station door, and upon his brusquely telling her to get aboard, she observed that “ diis looks like a very high step [but] I will try it. ” Then, supposing that he would be nearby to help her, she made the attempt, taking hold of the sloping hand holds which ran parallel to die steps. She did not use die vertical rails which were nearer to her. Her hand slipped on the smooth hand holds and she slid back into a jackknife position. She called out diat she was falling, but no one came to aid her and she did fall, landing on the small of her back, while her head struck a rail of die tracks.

The defendant’s trainman denies that he gave her any peremptory orders to board the train or that she said it was a high step or anything of diat nature. He testified diat all that passed between them was her request that he get her bags, and upon this he immediately walked away to do so. He stooped to pick them up widi his back to Mrs. Murray, and upon straightening up and turning around, he saw her sitting on the platform. He had heard no cry for help and says that she had indicated to him that she would not try to get aboard until after he returned with her luggage.

Meanwhile, the conductor, as soon as he got off the car, had gone into die station to register his train, as was his duty. He came out after she had fallen. One of Mrs. Murray’s two companions, who was standing near her on the platform, testified diat when she looked at the steps it never occurred to her diat die plaintiff would need any help in ascending them. There was odier evidence, some of which was conflicting, which it seems unnecessary to detail, although parts of it will be referred to later.

[369]*369The plaintiffs excepted to the Court’s failure to grant their request No. 3, which reads as follows:

“ The Boston & Maine Railroad, as a common carrier of passengers for hire, was bound to exercise such care, skill and diligence in transporting passengers as would a reasonably pru - dent man under like circumstances. ”

Upon this subject, the Court charged as follows:

“ Now, the defendant in this case is a corporation, a railroad corporation, and a common carrier of passengers for hire, the Boston & Maine Railroad . . . Now, of course, the fact that a person is a passenger for hire in a train, as the plaintiff was in this case, does not make the railroad an insurer or a guardian of that person against any injury that they may sustain. The railroad does not insure its passengers against all injury happening to them while they are traveling upon a train. A person is entitled to recover, however, as they would be in any other situation, if they are injured by reason of the negligence of the defendant railroad, if they themselves are free of negligence at the time of the occurrence.
“ The claim of the plaintiff here is that the defendant railroad was negligent in that they failed to assist the plaintiff, Mrs. Murray, in boarding the train at the station on the day in question in May, and that as a result of that failure the plaintiff fell and was injured while boarding the train. Now, it is for you to consider, all of the evidence on this particular issue, determining die conduct of all the parties, that is, the defendant’s agents and the plaintiff, in order to determine whether or not, first, there was an apparent necessity for assistance to the plaintiff in boarding tlie train, because I have to instruct you that the defendant railroad is under no duty to furnish assistance to a passenger in boarding a train unless there is an apparent necessity to do so. It is for you to consider all the circumstances surrounding this case to determine that. That means you will consider this situation with reference to the entrance to the train, the condition of the train itself, the condition of the various banisters or railings which people would use to assist themselves in boarding the train, die distance of the steps from the platform, the actual actions of the parties at the time, as to whether or not there was a request for assistance, the appearance of the plaintiff as to her age and as to whether it would be apparent to a person that she would need [370]*370assistance, and all of the other factors, to determine whether or not as far as the defendant’s agents were concerned there existed an apparent necessity for assistance to Mrs. Murray in boarding this train.
“ If you find by a preponderance of the evidence that there was such an apparent necessity, then you will consider whether or not they negligently failed to assist her to mount the train at the time the accident occurred. If you find that they did fail to assist her, and that there was an apparent necessity, and that as a result of their negligent failure to assist her under all the circumstances, and of course this includes whether or not they were available to assist her at the time she should have been assisted, under all those circumstances if you find the defendant railroad was negligent by its agents’ acts, you will then have found upon that issue for the plaintiff. . . .
“ Now, gentlemen, there has been evidence introduced of certain rules of the railroad and customs of the employees of the railroad in situations of this nature. I instruct you that you may consider and properly consider whether or not the railroad employees complied with the rides of the railroad and whether or not they complied with their customs that they had established, as evidence of whether or not the defendant railroad was negligent in this particular case.
“ You will understand, of course, that while the rules of the defendant railroad and the customs which they have observed over the years are evidence as to the methods by which the railroad operated, it may not properly be considered entirely as a substitute for your own good judgment as to whether or not the railroad under all the circumstances was negligent or not negligent. For that, of course, you must still apply the familiar rule of whether or not they acted under all the circumstances as a reasonably prudent person would have acted. This involves our old friend, die reasonably prudent person, that is, the person not necessarily acting the way you think you would act, but a person who would act not as the most negligent person and not as the most careful person, but the way you yourselves feel an average, ordinary, prudent person under the circumstances of this defendant’s agents would have found that they would or should have acted. ”

The essence of the plaintiffs’ request No. 3 is that die defendant is a common carrier and bound to exercise such care toward its [371]*371passengers “ as would a reasonably prudent man under like circumstances. ” The Court had told the jury that the defendant was a railroad corporation carrying passengers for hire on a train, which was a fact obvious and stressed throughout the trial.

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Murray v. Boston & Maine Railroad
224 A.2d 66 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
224 A.2d 66, 107 N.H. 367, 1966 N.H. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-boston-maine-railroad-nh-1966.