Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Porter

56 N.W. 808, 38 Neb. 226, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 324
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1893
DocketNo. 4948
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 56 N.W. 808 (Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Porter, 56 N.W. 808, 38 Neb. 226, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 324 (Neb. 1893).

Opinion

Ryan, C.

The amended petition in this case alleged the corporate existence of the Union Pacific Railway Company, and that it was operating a line of railroad through Kearney, Nebraska, at the time of the injuries complained of; that on April 29, 1890, plaintiff in said petition purchased a ticket entitling him as a passenger to be transported upon [231]*231■one of the trains of said railroad company from Grand Island, Nebraska, to the aforesaid station of Kearney on said railway company’s line of railroad; that when the ■train upon which plaintiff had ridden from Grand Island reached Kearney, it was stopped before the car on which plaintiff was located, or any part of the train, had reached the station house or platform of said railway company; that thereupon plaintiff passed out of said car to the platform thereof to alight, thinking he was at the station arid platform of the defendant, but finding that said train and ■coach on which plaintiff stood had not yet arrived at said station and platform, but that said coach was over 300 feet from said platform of the station, and the engine of the •defendant was’taking water, as plaintiff believed, and there being no platform or place to alight from said car opposite the same, and it being in the night-time and dark, and ■there being a wind-mill, engine-house, mail catcher, and water tank between where plaintiff then was and the east •end of the platform, and plaintiff not being notified by •defendant’s servants to alight there, plaintiff, standing on the lower step of the car, waited for defendant to pull its train up to said platform and station house so that he might with safety alight from said coach; that said train moved up to the platform but did not stop thereat, and when the coach on which plaintiff stood was opposite said platform, and while said train was moving slowly by said platform, plaintiff believing it was safe to alight therefrom, and being suddenly convinced that defendant was not going to stop its train at said platform, stepped from the lower •step of said car upon said platform, and in doing so plaintiff fell on said platform, and in so doing two bones of his leg were broken as a result of said accident. Plaintiff by further averments negatived the existence of any negligence •on his own part causing or conducing to the accident and injury aforesaid, and having alleged pain and suffering and •disability to practice his vocation as a physician for a [232]*232long time, and that permanent disability had been caused him by the aforesaid accident and injury, the plaintiff prayed judgment for $1,999.99 and costs.

The answer admitted the cor-porate existence of the defendant, and that at the time of the alleged injury it was operating a railroad, and seriatim denied each averment in the plaintiff’s petition contained, and alleged that whatever injury plaintiff had suffered was due wholly to his own negligence. There was a reply in denial of all allegations, of the answer inconsistent with the averments of the petition.

Upon a trial a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $1,314.49; and, a motion for a new trial having been overruled, judgment was duly rendered for the amount of said verdict.

There was but little evidence as to the manner of the accident, except such as was given by the plaintiff himself. Such evidence as there was, however, is found fully epitomized in the petition above described, and therefore requires no repetition. There was evidence, furthermore, that the railroad train which carried plaintiff from Grand Isl- and to Kearney made no stop at the water tank at the latter place, but that the stop which plaintiff believed was at the water tank was, in fact, made so as to allow the baggage to be unloaded from the baggage car in said train, directly opposite the baggage room of Kearney station. There was nndisputed evidence also that the train extended from the-baggage coach aforesaid to quite a distance east of the east end of the platform at the Kearney depot, and that the car-step upon which plaintiff was standing during the halt of the train was some distance east of the platform and incline at said station. There was a cinder walk along the track opposite to where plaintiff stood during the halt made by the train, upon which walk it would have been possible and safe for plaintiff to have walked to the Kearney depot, had he so chosen to have done. The time at which the [233]*233train reached Kearney was about 3 o’clock in the morning, and the sky was clear. There were no lights nearer where plaintiff found himself when the train halted than the depot, where there was a lantern opposite the passenger waiting-room door. The railway company, as plaintiff in error, insists that the defendant in error was negligent in not availing himself of the cinder walk as a means of reaching the depot platform, and that his alighting upon said platform from a moving train was negligence of itself, such as should avoid the verdict. The existence of negligence, as justifying or defeating a right of recovery, is for the jury to determine as it determines any other question of fact. If the jury find negligence as against the defendant, such as to justify a recovery, or find contributory negligence such that a recovery cannot be had, such finding must stand, unless it has no support in the evidence considered, just as must any other essential finding of fact. It is useless, therefore, to urge that the presiding judge is the proper trier of questions of this kind, and that as to such he should find the presence or absence of negligence upon the weight of the testimony, or instruct the jury to find its presence or absence according as a given fact or group of facts shall be proved or disproved. The court can but state to the jury the law applicable to the facts in respect to which evidence has been introduced. It thereupon remains with the jury to determine the existence of the essential facts. If there is no evidence such as the jury should act upon in its province, the court should instruct accordingly, or set aside the verdict as unsupported by the proofs. The court, therefore, properly refused to instruct as requested by the defendant.

The facts were submitted for the determination of the jury solely upon the following instructions:

“First — 'The defendant company undertook to carry the plaintiff from Grand Island to Kearney. If the plaintiff was injured during the journey the defendant company is [234]*234liable for the actual damages which he sustained, unless the injury done arose from the negligence of the plaintiff.
“Second — It was the duty of the company to notify the plaintiff that he was approaching his destination. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the train stopped before it reached the platform at the depot. This is denied by the defendant. The court charges the jury that it was the duty of the company to cause its train to be pulled up to the depot platform, so that the passengers might alight upon said platform with convenience and safety; but it was not incumbent upon the company to build a platform as long as its train, nor to pull up each car so that it was abreast of the platform. If the railway company furnished to the plaintiff at Kearney such facilities as it had for leaving the train, and the length of the platform available for that purpose was used by the company in unloading its passengers, and the same was reasonably adequate for that purpose, it ought not in that particular be required to do more.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.W. 808, 38 Neb. 226, 1893 Neb. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-pacific-railway-co-v-porter-neb-1893.