Spinney v. Boston Elevated Railway Co.

73 N.E. 1021, 188 Mass. 30, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1075
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 7, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 73 N.E. 1021 (Spinney v. Boston Elevated 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
Spinney v. Boston Elevated Railway Co., 73 N.E. 1021, 188 Mass. 30, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1075 (Mass. 1905).

Opinion

Barker, J.

The action is for personal injuries alleged to have been received by a passenger in an electric street car at the crossing of Massachusetts and Huntington Avenues in Boston. There was no dispute that the plaintiff was standing in the car, all the seats being occupied by passengers. She was thrown to the floor because of a jolt or jolts of the car as it moved over the crossing. As to other circumstances the evidence was contradictory, tending to prove, on the one hand, that the plaintiff and the conductor were the only persons standing in the aisle, the plaintiff being near the rear end and the conductor near the front and engaged in collecting fares, and that the plaintiff after having been taken from her footing by the jolting was hanging from a car strap when the conductor, thrown from near the front of the car to the place where the plaintiff was hanging, forcibly came against her and caused her to fall, he falling upon her. Also that the jolt or jolts were very violent and that they were caused in part by the turning on of the electricity for the purpose of moving the tongue of an electrical switch, as well as by the crossing of the car over other car tracks laid lengthwise on Huntington Avenue. On the other hand there was evidence tending to prove that a number of other passengers were standing in the aisle,' that the conductor did not fall upon or against the plaintiff nor come in contact with her, that the plaintiff merely swayed' back against the door and slid to the floor, and that there was no unusual or unreasonable jolt.

[32]*32There was no contention but that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care.

There are two bills of exceptions each filed by the plaintiff. The first is as to the action of the trial judge in dealing with requests for instructions to the jury. The plaintiff presented eleven requests, all of which it now is conceded were given in terms or covered by the charge, except the fourth, fifth and sixth. The first exception is to an alleged refusal to give those requests. The defendant presented six requests, and the fifth and sixth were given under an exception on the part of the plaintiff.

We think that the charge covered fairly and properly all the matters dealt with in the plaintiff’s fourth, fifth and sixth requests. As no argument to the contrary has been addressed to us it is unnecessary to consider these requests in detail. The plaintiff’s exception to the refusal to give them in terms is overruled.

The defendant’s fifth and sixth requests, which were given in terms under the plaintiff’s exception were as follows :

“5. If there was no evidence that the conductor in this case was an incompetent man or one whom the defendant company might reasonably be expected to have known would be likely to trip or fall or act in a clumsy or careless way, and if the jerk of the car which caused the conductor to fall (if the jury believe it did cause it) was a jerk resulting from proper and careful handling and propelling of a safe and proper car in good condition, over safe and proper rails, switches or other equipment also in good condition, then the fact that the conductor fell would not of itself be evidence of negligence for which the defendant company could be held responsible in this case.
“ 6. If there is no evidence that the defendant company had knowledge of the fact that this conductor was in any way incompetent either because of carelessness or because of the fact that he was an unusually clumsy or awkward man, then if the said conductor was thrown against the plaintiff by an ordinary movement of the car which of itself was no evidence of negligence, even if the jury believe that to be a fact, the defendant company could not be held responsible for the result of the said conductor falling against the said plaintiff.”

[33]*33In substance these requests are to the effect that although there was a jerk, if it resulted from the proper managing of a proper car upon a proper track the falling of the conductor upon the plaintiff would not of itself be evidence of actionable negligence, if the company did not know or could not reasonably be expected to know that he was an incompetent man, and that in the absence of such knowledge the defendant could not be held responsible in damages for the conductor being thrown against the plaintiff by an ordinary movement of the car. Or, in other words, that unless the defendant knew or had reason to know that the conductor was incompetent by reason of carelessness or awkwardness or clumsiness, the defendant could not be held responsible for injury received by the passenger by the conductor being thrown against her either by a jerk of the car or by its ordinary movement, if the car, the track and the management of the propelling of the car were proper as assumed in the fifth request, or without that, if he was thrown by the ordinary movement of the car as assumed in the sixth.

Correct and sufficient instructions as to the responsibility of the defendant for the conductor’s acts had been given to the jury by the presiding judge in language of his own. After stating the conflicting evidence upon the point he said, “ If the conductor’s conduct was negligent and unfit for the duties of his position resulting in the plaintiff’s harm, then that is negligence for which the defendant company would be responsible. But if he did on that occasion what it was reasonable to expect, if while he was standing collecting fares at the other end of the car this sudden jerk or jolt came and he was thrown beyond his power to prevent it, and he managed his person and his steps and momentum, and the force of his plunge, if he made a plunge, as well as he could, as well as was reasonable to expect under circumstances of that character, then the company would not be liable ... on account of his personal conduct.”

The movements and acts of the conductor in their bearing upon the safety of the plaintiff as a passenger were as between her and the defendant acts concerning their undertaking with her to use the proper degree of care in all respects to carry her safely. So to speak, his conduct in the car was official conduct as it regarded a passenger, and could not be looked at in a light [34]*34merely personal to himself. If it was in any respect wanting in due care and that negligence caused injury to the plaintiff’s person, it was negligence for which the defendant was answerable, whether the conductor was competent or incompetent, and whether or not the company might reasonably have known his incompetency. Not only did these rulings forbid the jury to find that an injury to the plaintiff occasioned by the negligence of the conductor in carelessly coming in contact with the plaintiff and thereby throwing her down and falling upon her would not be a ground for damages unless the company knew or had reason to know that the conductor was incompetent, if the accident was caused by a jerk, but also if his so falling against the plaintiff was brought about merely by the ordinary motion of the car. Plainly a carrier of- passengers is answerable for such negligence of an employee.

Probably the requests were understood by the presiding judge in some sense which at the time made them seem consistent with the rule laid down in his charge as to the effect of the personal conduct of the conductor.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.E. 1021, 188 Mass. 30, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spinney-v-boston-elevated-railway-co-mass-1905.