Taylor v. Bamberger Electric R.

220 P. 695, 62 Utah 552, 1923 Utah LEXIS 135
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1923
DocketNo. 3933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 220 P. 695 (Taylor v. Bamberger Electric R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Bamberger Electric R., 220 P. 695, 62 Utah 552, 1923 Utah LEXIS 135 (Utah 1923).

Opinions

FRICK, J.

Plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant, a common carrier, for personal injuries alleged to have been sus-[554]*554tamed through the negligence of the defendant while plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s passenger trains.

Defendant appeals from the judgment and assigns a large number of errors.

The undisputed facts material to this appeal are: That on September 4, 1916, plaintiff purchased a ticket from defendant at Ogden, Utah. The ticket entitled him to passage from Ogden to “Lagoon” and return. Lagoon is what is called a summer resort on defendant’s railroad about 15 miles north of Salt Lake City and about 21 miles south of Ogden and is open to the public during the summer months of each year, and it seems is largely patronized by the public. September 4, 1916, was what is known as Labor Day, a legal holiday, and was the last day the resort was open for the season of 1916. The record shows that defendant operated a large number of trains running between Ogden and Salt Lake City each day during the resort season, and on the day in question, on which trains patrons of the resort and passengers generally were carried to and from the resort and to and from all the stations on defendant’s route between the cities aforesaid. The day in question being Labor Day, a large number of people visited the resort, among whom was the plaintiff. The tickets, it appears, were good for passage on all of the trains passing the resort. On the day in question defendant had posted a notice that the train on which plaintiff took passage would leave Lagoon for Ogden some time between 11 o’clock and midnight and would be the last train that night. Plaintiff remained at the resort and was dancing until about the time the so-called last train was to leave for Ogden, when he and a friend of his left the dance hall to take the train for Ogden. Defendant’s cars were operated by electricity by means of an overhead trolley. The testimony shows that the train on which plaintiff and his friend sought passage on the night in question consisted of five cars, some of which were what are called “open” cars; that is, cars with steps running along the entire length of both sides of the cars by means of which the passengers can enter or leave at any point along the sides of the cars. When plaintiff and his friend arrived at the train, they entered [555]*555one of the closed cars; but, finding the seats occupied, as plaintiff testified, they went forward through several cars to a car in which there was a smoking compartment, which they entered, but finding all the seats occupied in that car, they stood up in the aisle until the train had reached Layton, a station about six miles from Lagoon on the way to Ogden. On arriving at Layton plaintiff and his friend left the smoking car through an open window for the alleged reason that the smoking car was filled with smoke, was warm and uncomfortable, although both of them smoked while they were in the car. They went through the window, they say, to avoid forcing their way through the crowded condition of the cars. Plaintiff testified that before entering the cars at Lagoon he noticed the crowded condition of the cars, and that, stating it in his own language, “they were vastly overcrowded,” including the steps on the open cars. He said that when they arrived at Layton the cars were so crowded that they, he and his friend, could not pass through the aisles, and that he knew the cars were in that crowded condition when he left the smoking ear as before stated, but noticing that some passengers had alighted from the train they, nevertheless, went back to get onto one of the other cars. Both he and his friend stated that after leaving the smoking car they ran to the rear of the train and got onto the steps of one of the open cars while the train was still standing, and that he saw and knew the crowded condition of the steps at that time. In that connection, he, on cross-examination, in referring to the crowded condition of the car steps, was asked the following question which he answered as indicated:

“Q. You knew. And knowing that, you hoarded that running board (the steps) and grabbed your companion’s shoulder or something else and risked your life to ride to Ogden? A. Yes, sir.”

He also testified that he though that getting on the running board was “a dangerous position.” Further:

“Q. You knew that a dangerous position would result in personal injury to you if the danger befell you, didn’t you? A. I did, I presume. Q. You took that position risking the chance that it would not (injure you), didn’t you? A. The position I took, yes.”

[556]*556Referring to tbe time immediately after plaintiff and bis friend bad left tjie smoking car and undertook to get onto tbe open car, be was asked:

“Q. When you boarded, this side hoard (the steps), on this car, there wasn’t any space for yourself, as I understand it? A. We had to- wedge ourselves in there; yes, sir. Q. So that you didn’t get in a space vacated by other passengers; you simply crowded your way up the running board (the steps), elbowing the people apart sufficiently to find a space for you to stand? A. Why— Q. Answer it yes or no. Did you, or didn’t you? A. Yes, sir.”

Tbe plaintiff and bis friend made additional statements to tbe same effect, but it is deemed unnecessary to set them forth at large. Plaintiff also said that be would bave been safe if be bad remained in tbe smoking ear or in tbe car be first entered. One of tbe plaintiff’s witnesses, wbo was in one of the other cars, also testified that while tbe cars were crowded and all tbe seats were occupied, there nevertheless “was some standing room in the aisles of tbe car.” The testimony on tbe part of plaintiff further showed that within a few minutes after tbe train bad left Layton it “lurched” or “swayed,” first to one side and then to the other, and that by reason thereof plaintiff fell or was thrown from tbe steps on which be was standing; that one of bis legs fell onto one of the rails of tbe track, and the wheels of the car passed over it and crushed it. Indeed, the evidence is to tbe effect that plaintiff suffered severe injuries, resulting in the amputation of one of bis legs. Plaintiff also proved that at or near tbe point where tbe train lurched or swayed as aforesaid there was a switch, and that there were three or four ties that had become loose or unstable by reason of the fact that water had run under them and had washed some of the ballast or earth from underneath the ties' leaving the track in an unstable condition, so that the rails would be pressed down by the weight of the train passing over the point in question, and that it was the unsafe condition of the track that caused the car on which plaintiff rode to violently sway or lurch, and that that caused him to fall from the steps on which he was standing. There were a number of plaintiff’s witnesses who testified to the lurching or swaying of the cars while passing over the track at the [557]*557point before stated. The evidence was clear and explicit, however, that tbe lurching or swaying of the cars did not injure any one inside of the cars. Moreover, so far as the evidence discloses, none except plaintiff was injured.

It was also contended that defendant was negligent in failing to properly light some of the cars, and that it was negligent in some other respects.

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Bluebook (online)
220 P. 695, 62 Utah 552, 1923 Utah LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-bamberger-electric-r-utah-1923.