Zoccolillo v. Oregon Short Line R.

177 P. 201, 53 Utah 39, 1918 Utah LEXIS 4
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1918
DocketNo. 3225
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 177 P. 201 (Zoccolillo v. Oregon Short Line 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
Zoccolillo v. Oregon Short Line R., 177 P. 201, 53 Utah 39, 1918 Utah LEXIS 4 (Utah 1918).

Opinion

FRICK, C. J.

The plaintiff commenced this action to recover damages for personal injuries which she alleged were suffered by reason of defendant’s negligence in permitting a passenger car on which she was a passenger' to become and be uncomfortably and unreasonably cold.

After alleging the necessary matters of inducement, and after stating how and when plaintiff became a passenger on one of defendant’s passenger trains, and giving the beginning and end of her journey, she stated the cause of her alleged injuries in the following words:

“That shortly after this plaintiff .so boarded said train the same started on its journey to Salt Lake City, and while plaintiff was such passenger in said car, so provided for plaintiff by the defendant, the defendant carelessly and negligently suffered and permitted said car in which plaintiff [41]*41was a passenger as aforesaid to become cold, by means whereof the plaintiff was greatly injured, and both her feet were frozen, and her right hand was frozen, and other parts of her body became cold,” etc.

She then alleges the consequences following the freezing of her feet, and the amount of damages she sustained by reason thereof, etc., and prayed for judgment.

The defendant interposed a general demurrer to the complaint, which was overruled; whereupon it answered the complaint, admitting that on the day and at the place named in the complaint plaintiff became and was a passenger on' one of its passenger trains. It denied all the allegations of negligence, etc. It also affirmatively alleged that at the time plaintiff became a passenger she was not in normal health; “that she was weakened and wasted by disease and sickness; ’ ’ that she was guilty of negligence in failing to provide herself with sufficient wraps and in other particulars; all of which acts and omissions were specifically set forth, and that the acts and omissions were the proximate cause of her alleged injuries.

The evidence produced on behalf of the plaintiff is in substance as follows:

That plaintiff, at the time of the injuries complained of, was twenty-two years of age, was married, and was born in Montana; that she, her husband, and her mother lived at Kalispell, Mont., until the 21st day of February, 1917; that for two weeks prior to that date plaintiff had been confined to her bed with tonsilitis and rheumatism, and had suffered with swollen feet; that she, her husband, and her mother had contemplated leaving Kalispell, Mont., to go to Helper, Utah, to live; that her sickness aforesaid detained them at Kalispell about ten days or two weeks longer than they had intended to remain there; that on the evening of February 21, 1917, she, her mother, and her husband and a young man, a friend of the family, left Kalispell• about nine o’clock; that the weather was cold, with about a foot and a half of snow on the ground; that they had left the home where they had lived earlier in the day, and had stayed with a friend’s family until train time, to which place plaintiff walked, the distance [42]*42being only a few blocks; that thereafter she was taken to the Great Northern station from the home of said friend in an automobile, where she boarded a sleeper on the Great Northern railway, in which she remained until they arrived at Great Falls, Mont., on the afternoon of the 22d of February; that .they remained at Great Falls about two hours; that while at ■ Great Falls plaintiff .was moved about in a wheel chair when movement became necessary; that they left Great Falls about four o’clock p. m. on the 22d for Butte, Mont., riding all the way in a day coach. Plaintiff testified that while on that train she was “pretty sick.” The train arrived at Butte shortly after midnight; that is, early on the morning of the 23d of February. Immediately after arriving at the Great Northern station- at Butte plaintiff was taken in a wheel chair from that station to defendant’s station, the two stations being about three blocks apart. Plaintiff and her relatives remained in this station during the remainder of the night, she remaining in the wheel chair. In the morning, between six and seven o’clock, she was taken to defendant’s train in a wheel chair, and was assisted into the day coach by her. husband, the young man who was traveling with them, and a brakeman of the defendant. Her husband spoke to the brakeman about plaintiff’s condition, and asked that she be given a seat near the ladies’ toilet in the day coach, which was done. After entering the car they turned over one seat, making a double seat for her next to the ladies’ toilet. Her mother was in the double seat with plaintiff, and her husband and the friend took the double seat across the aisle from where she was. She was thus placed in the end of the car next to the dining car, and the opposite end from which the passengers entered and left the car in which she was riding. The entire train consisted of a baggage car, a smoking car, day coach in which plaintiff and her relatives were riding, a dining car, and a sleeper, and her husband testified that it was a solid vestibuled train.

We deem it more logical to state at this point the evidence adduced by plaintiff relative to the condition or temperature of the car in which she was riding.

[43]*43In answer to her counsel she testified that in passing from the depot waiting room to the car at Butte, Mont., it was “pretty cold outside”; that the train left after she had entered the car in — ■

“about ten or fifteen. minutes;• something like that. Q. After you left there (the station) what did you notice about the temperature? A. I began to feel cold on my feet and draft getting to them. I felt cold all that time and uncomfortable, and I kept telling them I was cold. Q: Who do you mean? A. My mamma and husband; and they kept telling me to move my feet, and I kept doing that, and mamma says, ‘Put them on the steam,’ and I put them on the steam, but there was no steam there. * * * Q. What do you mean? A. Right on the pipes that was on the side of the ear. Q-.' Did you feel the heat at all ? A. No; there was no -steam there to amount to anything. * * * You couldn’t hardly feel the heat coming at all. * * * Q. How long did you continue to feel the car was cold? A. Why, until about — well, until quite late in the day. I don’t know just about what time, because I never noticed the time, but it was quite late -in the day.”

Plaintiff further testified that her mother took off plaintiff’s rubbers and her shoes, and she put her feet on the cushion of the opposite seat, and that her mother “throwed her things on, and then throwed my husband’s mackinaw on them” (her feet). She also said that she wore a pair of woolen stockings, a pair of heavy tan shoes, a pair of rubbers over them, which they took off her feet when she put them on the steam pipe as before stated, and she described-' the other clothing worn by her. On cross-examination she further testified:

“Q. You put your feet on'the opposite seat in front of you? A. Not right away aftekl got on- (the' train). Q. How long before you did? A. I didn’t until quite late in the day; until I began to feel pretty cold and thijy took off my shoes. Q. So you didn’t put your feet on the opposite seat until quite late in the day, when you began to feel pretty cold? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you let'your feet stay down? A. Yes, sir. * * # Q. As-a matter of fact'all the-way .from [44]*44Butte to Salt Lake City you were sick at the stomach and had a headache ? A. Yes, sir.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P. 201, 53 Utah 39, 1918 Utah LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zoccolillo-v-oregon-short-line-r-utah-1918.