Payne v. Springfield Street Railway Co.

89 N.E. 536, 203 Mass. 425, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 949
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 89 N.E. 536 (Payne v. Springfield Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payne v. Springfield Street Railway Co., 89 N.E. 536, 203 Mass. 425, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 949 (Mass. 1909).

Opinion

Loring, J.

These are two actions of tort brought for injuries suffered by the plaintiff in the first action while she was trying to board one of the defendant’s cars. The second action is brought by her husband, and is founded on the same accident. We shall speak of Mrs. Payne, the plaintiff in the first action, as the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s case was that as the car in question approached a white post on Main Street in Springfield, where she with a companion was waiting for a car, she stepped into the street and signalled to the motorraan by putting up her hand; that “ she saw the motorman look right down at her like that (indicating) and shake his head ”; that after that the car slowed down and stopped; that when it stopped the rear of it was ten or twelve feet beyond the white post; that she and her companion followed up behind, walking diagonally across the street; that she un[429]*429dertook to get on board and for this purpose put both feet on the step, and after putting her bundles on the floor of the vestibule, with both hands on the grab irons was in the act of raising her left foot from the step to the floor of the vestibule, when the car started with a jerk, and threw her back into the street. Evidence was introduced in her behalf that she was unconscious until she got nearly to her house ; that she lost four or five teeth, and as a result of the accident was paralyzed on the right side and “had lost the sense of smell, taste, sight and hearing.”

The defendant’s case was that the plaintiff did not signal the car by holding up her hand for the motorman or otherwise; that the car came to a stop because a car, or cars, ahead of it were brought to a standstill for some two minutes, by a car in front crossing the track at right angles, to go down Main Street in the opposite direction ; that while the car which the plaintiff undertook to board was waiting for a clear track, some two or three people got on and the plaintiff came up from behind to get on also; that the car then started, and after it had started she grabbed the handles, tried to board the car and was thrown down; that the injuries which this caused were slight; that she had not in fact become paralyzed and lost the sense of smell, taste, sight and hearing, but thought she had; or, as one of the witnesses for the defendant put it, she had hysteria, a suggestive disease; that a person who has hysteria, on being examined and an injury or trouble suggested, assumes that trouble.

It appeared that at the time here in question the conductor was taking fares in the forward part of the car, and on hearing two bells from the motorman indicating that the track was clear, called out “ All right ? ” and on some one’s answering “ All right,” rang the bell for the car to start.

The presiding judge instructed the jury that a person does not become a passenger when he signals the car, nor when he is crossing from the sidewalk to take it; that the company has not accepted him then, but that when for the purpose he goes toward it (after it has stopped at a regular stopping place for the receipt of passengers) and takes hold of it and comes in contact with it in the process of entering it, then at least he is a passenger; that if the jury believed the evidence introduced by the plaintiff they could find that the plaintiff had become a passenger.

[430]*430The judge then took up the legal aspect of the case if they believed the defendant’s evidence. His charge on that aspect of the case was in these words: “ It [the defendant] claims, as I understand it, that, the car having passed north of the white post, . . . stopped not for the purpose of receiving passengers but to permit a car to come out of Lyman Street, to pass the cross-over, on to the west track of Main Street, and thus south; that it waited, and that while it thus waited certain passengers (a couple) got on, because the car had stopped, although not at the usual stopping place; that after they had gotten on a certain interval occurred of indefinite length, — I mean the witnesses vary, — but just as the car was starting, the conductor not knowing and not having reason to believe that anybody was entering then, that then they [the plaintiff and her companion] reached the car [and it started] before she [the plaintiff] had touched it, and that she seized the grab handles and attempted to get on after it started. Now, if that is the state of facts, then a different rule might apply, and you will have to determine as one of the facts in this case what she was doing. If she was doing what the defendant claims, — attempting to get on to the car after it started, — not having touched the car at all, no matter how near she was, until it started, then you might or might not say she was in exercise of due care.”

Later the jury came in for further instructions and submitted the following question to the presiding judge: “ ‘ What constitutes becoming a passenger, with regard to taking hold of the handles?’ meaning of the car.” To this the judge gave this instruction, “ Gentlemen, the Supreme Court has recently answered that question, and I had purposed in the charge to read the answer but I overlooked it. The court recently said this: ‘ We are unwilling to go farther than the doctrine stated in Davey v. Greenfield & Turners Falls Street Railway, 177 Mass. 106, that when there has been an invitation on the part of the carrier by stopping for the reception of a passenger any person actually taking hold of the car and beginning to enter it is a passenger.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 N.E. 536, 203 Mass. 425, 1909 Mass. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-springfield-street-railway-co-mass-1909.