Reis v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway Co.
This text of 189 Iowa 988 (Reis v. Minneapolis & St. Louis 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.
Opinion
The theory of the defense and of the motion to direct a verdict in its favor was that the plaintiff was not a passenger, and that defendant owed him no duty as such; that the leaving of the baggage on the platform ivas an act of trespass; and that defendant aaus, therefore, under no duty to care for it, except to refrain from its Avanton or willful injury.
[990]*990The authorities called to our attention as to the nature of a carrier’s duty to passengers, on thé one hand, and to trespassers on the other, are undoubtedly correct, and appellant’s statement of the rules applicable thereto may be conceded. The fundamental error in the argument is in its seeming assumption that, if plaintiff was not a passenger, with the rights pertaining to that relation, then he was, as a matter of course, a trespasser, with no rights other than those which protect trespassers generally against wanton injury. The very nature of the business of an ordinary railroad company implies and makes necessary meeting and intercourse between its officers and agents and the general public. At its stations, as a rule, are to be found its ticket offices and freight offices. Not infrequently in the same connection are found telegraph and express offices, for the public accommodation. Any person, though not at the instant a, passenger or shipper, may lawfully go there for information as to rates and trains, or to meet friends or to accompany others about to depart,, or to attend to any of the multitude of matters arising out of or pertaining to the business of railroad transportation. None of them may be able to claim the peculiar rights with which the law clothes a passenger or shipper, yet they are by no means trespassers or mere licensees. If a person intending to become a passenger, and wishing to avoid the hurry and confusion attendant upon the late checking of baggage, causes it to be taken to the station, and placed upon the platform somewhat in advance, intending to follow it and procure his checks, it would be a singular instance of gross injustice to hold that he is a trespasser, and that the company is under no obligation to exercise any degree of care for the safety of his property. It may be admitted that he is not yet a passenger, and that, until the baggage is accepted, the company is not yet charged with the duty of a carrier; but it will not do to say that, when a person intending to become a passenger has come upon the premises where the carrier solicits and transacts business with the public, and he is there for the purpose of perfecting arrangements by which he may be[991]*991come a passenger and complete the delivery of his baggage to the carrier, he is entitled to no protection against the company’s negligence.
It is not necessary to hold that a company upon whose platform goods or baggage is deposited for later shipment would be chargeable with liability in such case, if the property is stolen or otherwise lost or injured by the wrong or fault of some third person, or by other cause in no way attributable to its own act or negligence; but,, if property which is lawfully there upon its own premises for delivery into its keeping — though such delivery is still incomplete— is destroyed because the premises so- maintained for the transaction of such business are made dangerous by its own negligence, there can be no hardship in holding it to respond in damages.
Plaintiff’s testimony is undisputed, that, having arrived at Hampton in the evening, and intending to depart on the same road in the morning, he proposed to avoid carrying his baggage to a hotel, by leaving it at the station, and having it checked to his destination; and this was not an unreasonable design. He did so leave it, and had returned to the station to accomplish that purpose, but had not yet completed the delivery by placing it in the hands of the agent and obtaining a check, when the fall of the tower occurred. From his arrival on defendant’s train, the goods were at all times on its premises, for the purpose of further transportation. Had plaintiff been waiting at the station, to take a later train that evening, and left his baggage in the same place, while he stepped into the restaurant for a lunch, we apprehend there would be little contention against the validity of his claim for damages. We are unable to see that his intention to remain in town until morning materially alters the situation. He had returned to the station for the purpose of completing the delivery and checking of his baggage,, when its injury, occasioned by the dangerous condition of the premises, intervened.
[992]*992
The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial. — Reversed.
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189 Iowa 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reis-v-minneapolis-st-louis-railway-co-iowa-1920.