Slaven v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

171 S.E. 818, 114 W. Va. 315, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1933
Docket7650
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 171 S.E. 818 (Slaven v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slaven v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 171 S.E. 818, 114 W. Va. 315, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

Maxwell, President:

To a judgment against it for $1,300.00, based on verdict, in favor of the plaintiff for personal injuries received by her while a passenger on one of its trains, the defendant was awarded a writ of error.

On the night of July 4, 1932, plaintiff, traveling from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Martinsburg, West Virginia, occu *317 pied a seat in tbe rear coach of an excursion train of the defendant returning from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh. The train was heavy, consisting of eleven passenger coaches and one combination car used for passengers and baggage.

When the train stopped at the Martinsburg station about one o’clock in the morning of July 5th, the name of the station not having been announced in the car in which the plaintiff was riding by any member of the train crew, and she not knowing the location but becoming apprehensive that her destination had been reached, started forward through the train making inquiries of fellow-passengers as to whether the train was then at Martinsburg. She did not receive any information until she had proceeded through several cars when she met a man, fellow-passenger, in a vestibule of one of the cars. He informed her that the station was Martinsburg. She testified: “I announced: ‘This is my station’, and that I had to get off. Just as I said that, the train blew. He asked me, when I said I had to get off, he began opening the door, and asked me if I could jump. * * * I said I would try.” He opened the door for her, and, without the floor board’s being raised so she could descend the steps, she left the car. She said in testimony: “I grabbed the rail with my right hand and eased myself down the best I could.” The floor of the car was fifty-one inches above the station platform. There was but little light outside the car — the plaintiff in her testimony referred to the semi-darkness, but in the declaration it is averred that it was “very dark”. On the inside of the door near its top there was a notice which read: “Passengers should not stand on the platform and must not open vestibule doors.” The rays of an electric light shone upon it, though she says she did not see it. The result of her descent was serious injury to her left ankle.

A rear door of the second coach from the front was opened for the discharge of passengers at Martinsburg, and two passengers left the train. The conductor stood there to render assistance. Owing to the fact that the engine took water at that station, the train remained standing about six minutes. It had not started when plaintiff alighted.

Because of heavy duties, the conductor assigned to the brakeman the task of examining and of taking up or punching *318 tickets of passengers in tbe three coaches at the rear of the train. The plaintiff testified and the brakeman admitted that he examined and punched her ticket soon after the train left Baltimore, but that he did not take it. She also testified that while he was looking at her ticket she asked him what would be the time of the arrival of the train at Martinsburg, and that he asked her if she would be getting off there, to which inquiry she replied in the affirmative; that when he handed the ticket back he told her the train would be due at Martins-burg 'at one-forty but might be a little late because they were following a regular passenger train. The brakeman testified that the destination of most of the passengers was Pittsburgh, and that he did not take plaintiff’s ticket because he did not notice that the destination indicated thereby was Martinsburg. He denied that she asked him the time of arrival at Martins-burg, or that she told him that she would get off'there, or that he inquired of her whether Martinsburg was her destination.

The plaintiff takes the position that it was negligence on the part of the railroad company to fail to announce her station and in failing to provide her a reasonably safe place to alight, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of her injuries, provided she, in undertaking to alight at the time and place she did, acted as a reasonably careful woman would have acted under the circumstances, and that the questions involved were for jury determination as issues of fact.

It is the position of the railroad company that its failure to make announcement in the car in which the plaintiff was riding of the arrival of the train at Martinsburg was not the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury; that the unauthorized, unanticipated and negligent act of an intermeddler (the stranger who opened the ear door for the plaintiff) intervened; that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; and that under the state of facts presented by the evidence, it was the duty of the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant.

We are of opinion that the trial court should have directed a verdict for the defendant as requested. Several propositions combine to impel us to this conclusion.

In our opinion, the defendant’s negligence in failing to announce in the coach in which plaintiff was riding that Martinsburg was about to be or had been reached was not *319 tbe proximate cause of tbe injury of wbieb tbe plaintiff complains. For its failure so to announce tbe station, tbe defendant would bave been liable to tbe plaintiff in damages if sbe bad been carried beyond ber destination, but we do not tbink it could reasonably bave been anticipated that any passenger would violate tbe company’s conspicuously displayed warning to passengers not to open vestibule doors, and would undertake to alight by jumping or swinging down from the floor of tbe vestibule in tbe darkness, as this woman did. Tbe thing which happened was not a natural and probable consequence of tbe failure to make announcement of tbe station. In plaintiff’s behalf, there is cited tbe following statement from 22 Ruling Case Law, page 187:

“Where a railway company fails to stop its train at the usual place for a passenger to alight, it must assume that be will, if be thinks be can properly do so, endeavor to get off, and if be is injured in getting off, the failure to stop the train is the proximate cause of the injury.’’

That statement is based on the case of Martin v. Southern Railway Company, (S. C.) 58 S. E. 3. We are unable to ascertain, however, that that doctrine has been recognized and applied elsewhere. It is the general rule that while it is the duty of a railroad company to announce the arrival of the train at the station to which it has contracted to carry a passenger, and-to discharge him safely, yet the fact that the company neglects to make such announcement does not justify the passenger in attempting to alight from the train in a manner involving great risk of personal injury to himself. Many cases sustain this rule. Walker v. V. S. & P. Ry. Co., (La.) 7 L. R. A. 111, 6 So. 916; Railroad Co. v. Aspell, 23 Pa. St. Rep. 147; H. & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Leslie, 57 Tex. 83; S. & N. A. Rd. Co. v. Schaufler, 75 Ala. 136; Dougherty v. C. B. & Q. Rd. Co., 86 Ill. 467; Farley v. N. & W. Ry. Co., 67 W. Va. 350, 67 S. E. 1116.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.E. 818, 114 W. Va. 315, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slaven-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-wva-1933.