St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Barnett

45 S.W. 550, 65 Ark. 255, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 550 (St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Barnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Barnett, 45 S.W. 550, 65 Ark. 255, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 62 (Ark. 1898).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This suit is to recover damages for personal injuries produced by the alleged negligence of appellant in keeping a defective platform. The answer denied negligence, and charged appellee with contributory negligence. The evidence on behalf of the appellee tended to show that, as she debarked from one of appellant’s trains at Corning station, she was injured in stepping upon a plank of the platform which was loose and tilted to one side, thereby letting her fall. The plank was at the edge of the platform. It lay straight with the track. One of the witnesses testified: “The "plank was loose; gave down an inch over the sleeper; would tilt towards the track.” Another testified: “If a person stepped right on the edge of the plank, it would raise a little — not a great ways — because the nails had just worked loose. . The plank was a solid two-inch plank, but a little loose.” On behalf of appellant the evidence tended to prove that the plank was not loose. One witness testified “that he weighed 198 pounds, and the next morning after the injury stepped upon the plank, and it would not tilt with him. He examined it, and found it sound.” Other witnesses testified that they inspected the plank, and did not find anything the matter with it. With the evidence thus conflicting, we would not disturb the verdict upon the question of fact as to the defective platform. But the jury should have been properly instructed as to the degree of care that railroads owe their passengers to protect them from injury by reason of defective platforms.

1. The court instructed the jury as follows: “That it is the duty of the railroad company to keep the platform at its various station houses in good repair and safe condition for the use of those who have a legal right to go upon them. And if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the injury complained of in this case was directly caused by the failure of the defendant railroad company to keep the platform of the depot in repair, then you will find for the plaintiff.”

In McDonald v. C. & N. W. R. Co., 26 Ia. 124, Judge Dillon, speaking for the court, said: “They [railroads] are bound to keep in safe condition all portions of their platforms and approaches thereto, to which the public do, or naturally would resort.” Our own court in Tex. & St. L. R. Co. v. Orr, 46 Ark. 195, uses this exact language, and in St. L., I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Cantrell, 37 Ark. 517, and L. R. & F. S. R. Co. v. Cavenesse, 48 Ark. 125, this court has apparently sanctioned the rule in the broad terms as above quoted. An examination of the facts of the Arkansas cases, however, will show that this court was not called upon to discuss, nor did it have in mind, the care which should be exercised by a railroad to furnish its passengers safe platforms at its stations for entrance to and exit from its trains. In Tex. & St. L. R. Co. v. Orr the injury was produced by an “open ditch and trestle,” the existence of which the railway knew, and the railroad did not pretend to deny that it was negligence to thus keep it, provided the passengers were justified in passing over the route in which the said ditch and trestle lay. In St. L., I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Cantrell, and L. R. & F. S. R. Co. v. Cavenesse, supra, the injuries complained of were not produced by defective platforms at all. In none of these cases, therefore, was the exact question we have here involved.

In speaking of tbe duties of masters to servants or railroads to passengers, text writers and judges often use expressions like these, to-wit: “They are bound to furnish safe machinery, safe appliances, safe places to ivorh, safe platforms,” etc. Hutch. Car. § 516; Penn. R. Co. v. Henderson, 51 Pa. St. 315; Liscomb v. Ry. & Trans. Co., 6 Lans. 75; Toledo, etc. R. Co. v. Grush, 67 Ill. 262; McDonald v. C. & N. W. Ry. supra; Tex. & St. L. R. Co. v. Orr. and L. R. & Ft. S. R. Co. v. Cavenesse, supra; Ray, Neg. Imp. Duties, 91; Wallace v. Wilmington & N. R. Co., 18 Atl. Rep. 818; 2 Wood, Railways, pp. 1340, 1341, 1344.

But in none of the works or adjudicated cases does the word “safe,” when thus used, have an absolute or unqualified meaning; for that would make these classes of persons guarantors or insurers of the safety of their servants, employees and passengers. Every legal tyro knows that such is not the law. “Accidents, strictly speaking, are those things which human prescience and prudence can neither foresee nor forestall. Our own court in L. R. & F. S. R. Co. v. Cavenesse, supra, shows clearly that the word “safe,” when used as above, Roes not have an absolute or unqualified meaning; for, while it is said “that it is the duty of the carrier to keep its stations and approaches thereto in good condition, and to provide safe and convenient means of entrance and departure,” it is also said that carriers of passengers are not insurers of the safety of their passengers, as they are of goods, at common law. While lawyers understand this, jurors may not. So, to prevent any misapprehension of the term “safe,” when employed as above, the trial court, if requested, should so define it as to present the real duty of railroads to their passengers in the matter of shielding them against dangers growing out of the use of station platforms. What is that duty f Railroads, according to the decided weight of authority, must exercise ordinary care in providing station platforms that will secure their passengers, in so far as such care can do so, against any injury that may result in the use of them. 1 Fetter, Car Pass. § 47; Kelly v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 112 N. Y. 443; 20 N. E. Rep. 383; Laffin v. Buffalo R. Co., 106 N. Y. 136; Taylor v. Penn Co., 50 Fed Rep. 755; 4 Elliott, Railroads, § 1590, cases cited; Hutchinson, Car. § 521a; Moreland v. Boston & P. R. Co., 141 Mass. 31.

Such “ordinary care” is that which a man of ordinary prudence would exercise under the circumstances to accomplish the end in view, namely, the safety of the passenger. As was said in Central R. & R. Co. v. Ryles, 84 Ga. 420, 11 S. E. 499, ordinary care “is a relative, and not an absolute term. The degree of care and foresight which it is necessary to use (in any given case) must always be in proportion to the nature and magnitude of the injury that will be likely to result from the occurrence which is to be anticipated and guarded against.” St. L., I. M & S. R. Co. v. Hecht, 38 Ark. 357; Bailey’s Master & Servant, “Care,” § 963 et seq., 4 Elliott, Railroads, p. 2479. It will thus be seen that even the ordinary care which requires a degree of prudence and vigilance commensurate with the perils to be apprehended and the injuries to be avoided may require a high degree of care, because, as the sequel in this case shows, assuming that the verdict was correct, the danger was great. Passengers are invited by railroads upon their station platforms for the purpose of making entrance to and exit from their trains. There is always more or less noise and confusion incident to the running of trains. Then the jostling and scurrying to and fro of the crowds, passengers and others, coming and going, altogether, make the circumstances quite unpropitious for passengers to make minute or extended investigations for their own safety. They do not have to do so. They may naturally and properly expect that the railroad has used every reasonable and prudent precaution to make their platforms safe, and may rest upon that assurance, only exercising ordinary care to prevent injury to themselves in the use of them.

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45 S.W. 550, 65 Ark. 255, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-co-v-barnett-ark-1898.