Savage v. Rhode Island Company

67 A. 633, 28 R.I. 391, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 2, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 67 A. 633 (Savage v. Rhode Island Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savage v. Rhode Island Company, 67 A. 633, 28 R.I. 391, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 67 (R.I. 1907).

Opinion

*393 Paekhurst, J.

This is an action brought under the statute by the plaintiff as administratrix of the estate of William H. Savage, and for the benefit of herself as his widow, to recover damages for his death, alleged to have been-due to the defendant’s negligence. It was tried before a jury in the Superior Court for Providence county, December 19, 20, and 21, 1906. 'It appears by, the testimony in the case that Savage, the plaintiff’s intestate, a man twenty-four years old, had entered the employ of the defendant as conductor, Saturday, July 18, 1903, the day before he was killed, and was put on the line between Providence and Crescent Park. He made three round trips with George L. Phillips, an experienced conductor, during the afternoon and evening of that day, and the next day (Sunday) he took full charge of a car.

On the trip when he was killed he left Crescent Park with his car, an open bloomer car, a little before six o’clock in the evening. The car was crowded, and men were standing on the running-board. Along Pawtucket avenue, in the vicinity of the place of the accident, the track for cars coming toward Providence was on the east side of the street next to the sidewalk, not far from a series of poles carrying electric-light wires. According to the rules of the defendant company, the running-board was down on the right side next to the sidewalk and the poles, and on the left side the running-board was up and the bar at the end of the seats down.

As the car was traveling in the neighborhood of Mr. Henry Ide’s house, which is on the west side of Pawtucket avenue, the conductor, Savage, went along the running-board collecting fares or giving out transfers, and had to pass outside of a man standing on the running-board. As he did so, his head collided violently with an electric-light pole, belonging to the Narragansett Electric Lighting Company, located beside the track, and he was knocked to the ground. When the car had been brought to a stop two hundred feet or more beyond the pole, several men went back and carried him into Mr. Ide’s house. He had one or two severe wounds on the right side of his head, and died shortly afterwards without’ regaining consciousness.

The pole with which Savage collided was somewhat nearer *394 the track than other poles along that street. It had been in the same position at least all that summer, and apparently for a number of years, and it was enough nearer to the track than other poles in its vicinity so as to be the subject of special warning to the plaintiff’s intestate to look out for it himself and to warn his passengers of it when they were upon the running-board.

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for $5,000. The defendant then filed a motion for a new trial on the grounds, that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, and the weight thereof; that the verdict was contrary to the law, and that the amount of damages was excessive. This motion was overruled, and the defendant’s exception noted. The case is now before this court on a bill of exceptions filed by the defendant, and allowed by the court, incorporating all the exceptions taken by the defendant throughout the case.

'The main questions are:

1. Was the verdict so clearly against the evidence that a new trial should be granted by the Supreme Court on that ground?

2. Were the damages awarded so clearly excessive that a new trial should be granted on that ground?

3. Was the burden upon the defendant to prove that the deceased had notice of the dangerous proximity of the pole to the track, if that was an extraordinary risk, and not an obvious one, or was the burden upon the plaintiff to show that the deceased had no such notice?

4. Did the jury have the right to disbelieve the testimony of the witness Phillips, that he pointed out the pole to the deceased and warned him of the danger from it, or were they bound to accept his testimony as conclusive on that vital point in the case?

5. Was there any reversible error in the numerous exceptions, or any of them brought up by the bill of exceptions?

A careful reading of the record of testimony convinces us that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence.

As relating to the question whether the plaintiff was married to William H. Savage, and so entitled to sue for her own bene *395 fit as Ms lawful widow, there was sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding for the plaintiff on that point.

(1) On the question of contributory negligence, however, we are satisfied that the plaintiff has not proved that the deceased was in the exercise of due care at the time of the accident.

So far as the evidence introduced by the plaintiff is concerned, it does not appear that the deceased conductor, at the time he was on the running-board, took any precautions whatever, by looking ahead to see whether he could safely swing out to pass by a passenger standing upon the running-board at the time when he did so attempt to pass and was injured. It must have been known to him that there were poles and trees and similar obstructions all along the fine of the road; and wMle he would be justified (in the absence of special warning or of actual knowledge) in assuming that he could safely stand and pass along the running-board without danger in the ordinary way, he would not be justified in assuming that he could at any time or place swing out to any distance he might find convenient for the purposes of passing passengers standing upon the running-board. If it became necessary, as it often is, so to swing out and pass, it would plainly be his duty to look ahead and see that he could pass safely in that manner. The testimony does not show that the pole in question was so near as to endanger passengers standing straight upon the running-board;, in fact it shows the contrary, for it appears that there were several persons standing upon the running board at this time, none of whom were hurt, including the passenger around whom the deceased was passing at the time of the accident; and it also appears that no one had previously been hurt at that point, so far as the witness Phillips knew, who was the only witness called who had had long experience on this particular line. It therefore appears that the accident was not due solely to the proximity of the pole to the car, but to the act of the plaintiff’s intestate in voluntarily placing himself in a position of more than ordinary danger, from which the simplest precaution would have saved him. There was also the positive testimony of the defendant’s witness Phillips, that on the previous day, when said Phillips had the deceased under instruction, he had *396 warned the deceased as to the proximity of this particular pple, when he was passing along the running-board while the car was approaching the pole; and that the deceased so warned passed it in safety. As the testimony of the witness Phillips is the subject of special attack on behalf of the plaintiff, it will be further considered hereafter.

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Bluebook (online)
67 A. 633, 28 R.I. 391, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savage-v-rhode-island-company-ri-1907.