Judges: Bartlett
Filed Date: 11/23/1909
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
There is no conflict in the evidence as to the condition of things which prevented the train in which the plaintiff was a passenger from getting into the defendant’s station at Boston on the night of the 2nd of January, 1904. The weather was extremely cold — the temperature ranging from six degrees Fahrenheit to zero — and the wind was blowing hard and a heavy snow storm prevailed, of such proportions as to be ordinarily, denominated in America a blizzard. The snow fell to the depth of almost a foot on the level and was blown in the railroad yard into drifts three and five feet high. This drifting snow accumulated in the switches, packing in and around the points and other movable parts so that the sivitclies could not be operated from the signal tower until the snow ivas removed. According to one of the witnesses the high wind forming snowdrifts over the switches put everything in the yard “out of commission” about six o’clock in the evening, inasmuch as the entire force
It was further proved that a storm of such a character as has been described is unusual in Boston and that all the switches on the defendant’s track were in perfect condition and capable of being operated perfectly if they had not been obstructed by snow and ice. There is some discrepancy as to the precise point where the train from Quincy was stalled'—• some of the witnesses stating that it was six hundred or seven hundred feet outside the railroad yard and others that it was at or near the Dover street station, about a mile distant. However that may be, there is no doubt that the train was blocked by the blizzard. Nor can there be any doubt on this record that the defendant railway corporation through its servants and agents made strenuous efforts during the night to clear away the obstructions so as to permit the entrance of this train and all other incoming trains into the station. These efforts, as has been seen, were not successful until the next morning.
The chief question with which we have to deal in the present case is the effect of an act of God or inevitable accident to relieve a common carrier from his obligation to carry passengers promptly. The defendant pleaded the Boston blizzard of January 2, 1904, as its excuse for delaying the arrival of the plaintiff from 8:55 o’clock in the evening until 6 o’clock the next morning. It denominates the blizzard an
The cases are numerous in which a snow storm has been held to be an act of God which will relieve a common carrier
In Black v. Chicago, Burl, & Quincy R. Co. (30 Neb. 197) the witnesses characterized the snow storm as a blizzard, and an unprecedented snow storm of such violence as to obstruct the movement of trains was declared to fall within the term “ act of God.” It was further said that while common carriers are not insurers against loss occasioned by an act of God, they are required, upon the intervention of an act of God, to exercise ordinary and reasonable care and diligence to protect the property which they have .undertaken to transport against any loss or damage.'
In Feinberg v. D., L. & W. R. R. Co. (52 N. J. Law, 451) the great blizzard of March 12,1888, was held to be “ undoubtedly the act of God ” or an inevitable accident not anticipated or within the control of the railroad company.
In Ballentine v. North Missouri R. R. Co. (40 Mo. 491) it was held that a carrier is not liable for negligence if he be prevented from performing his duty by an act of God, and that a snow storm which blocks up a railroad to such an extent as to hinder and delay the running of cars is such an act.
In Pruitt v. Hannibal & St. Joseph R. R. Co. (62 Mo. 527), which was an action for damages alleged to have been occasioned by the defendant’s negligence and breach of contract as a common carrier, the principal defense relied upon to excuse the failure promptly to transport the plaintiff’s property was the occurrence of_ a remarkable and unprecedented snow storm which stopped the trains from ten to fifteen days. The court expressed the opinion that a violent snow storm or excessively cold weather could hardly be regarded as an extraordinary event in the latitude of the defendant’s railroad in North Missouri during the months of December and January, but nevertheless held that such storms when of sufficient violence or duration to obstruct the passage of trains must be allowed to excuse delays so long as the obstructions continued.
In Cunningham v. Wabash R. R. Co. (79 Mo. App. 524) the delay of the carrier was sought to be excused by reason
In Jones v. Minneapolis & St. Louis R. R. Co. (91 Minn. 229) the plaintiff had delivered to the defendant alot of cattle for transportation on a freight train, but before the freight train reached its destination it was caught in a blizzard and became snow-bound so that the cattle froze to death. The Supreme Court of Minnesota held that the loss was due proximately to the storm, which was an act of God ; and that when the intervention of such an overpowering cause was established the burden was upon the opposite party to show that the negligence of the carrier had in some manner concurred in or contributed to the loss.
The foregoing cases relate to acts of God in their effect upon the liability of carriers of goods. We are concerned here, however, not with the destruction of property but with the delay of apassenger. Even in respect to goods, a common carrier is not ail' insurer as to time. While he is responsible for the safety and final delivery thereof and the general rule is that nothing can exonerate him from that responsibility but the act of God or the public enemy, he is responsible only for the exercise of due diligence in regard to the time of delivery. (Parsons v. Hardy, 14 Wend. 215.) So in respect to passengers, a common carrier is not an insureras to the time when passengers will reach their destination, in the absence of an express contract on the subject. (Gordon v. M. & L. Railroad, 52 N. H. 596, 599, and cases therein cited.) If a railroad company negligently fails to keep the time it promises, it will be liable in damages for injury thereby accruing to a passenger. “ But to entitle the plaintiff to recover there must be proof of negligence. Neither time table nor advertisement is a warranty of punctuality.” (Wharton on Negligence, § 662.) A railroad company which receives a person upon a train as a pas- ‘
In the case at bar the time table of the defendant was not put in evidence, but the complaint alleges and the answer does not deny that the train upon which the plaintiff took passage at Quincy was due in Boston at about 8:55 o’clock the same evening. We may assume that this was the advertised hour of arrival appearing in the defendant’s time table. Such publication imposes upon the railroad company the obligation to exercise all reasonable care and diligence to make the movements of its trains correspond thereto; but the obligation is not absolute and unconditional. The carrier may be relieved therefrom, if without any negligence on its part the observance of punctuality is prevented by the act of God or inevitable accident. It is the duty of the carrier to exercise reasonable foresight in the anticipation of obstructions to travel; to use all available means for tbe removal of such obstructions, and to proceed with tile transportation as soon as practicable after such removal. (Bowman v. Teall, 23 Wend. 306.) Where all this has been done, the intervention of an act of God or vis major exonerates the carrier from legal liability for the delay.
A case in point is Compton v. Long Island R. R. Co. (1 N. Y. S. R. 554), decided by the General Term of the second department, when Chief Judge Cullen was a member of that
If we apply the rule thus stated to the facts of the present case it is decisive of this appeal. The snow storm which delayed the train in which the plaintiff was a passenger must, under all the authorities, be classed as an act of God. Proof of its occurrence and effect constituted a complete defense to the plaintiff’s claim so far as it was based merely on the delay which he sustained. So far as he complained of the dark, cold and uncomfortable condition of the car in which he says he was compelled to spend the night, and the failure of the defendant to mitigate such condition, there was a conflict of evidence on that issue, and the plaintiff would have been entitled to go to the jury if that part of the case had been submitted separately. The charge, however, left the jury at liberty to hold the defendant liable for the delay due to the blizzard, even if they should find that the railroad company had done all that it could reasonably be required to do in the way of ameliorating the plaintiff’s surroundings during the period of detention. Under these circumstances justice obviously requires a reversal of the judgment. The defendant’s exception was well taken to that portion of the charge which left it to the jury to say whether the storm rendered it impossible for the railroad company to transport the plaintiff to his destination on that evening. The evidence was not such as to permit a negative answer to that question. It was all the other way.
The sole defense in this case is the occurrence of a snow
For the reasons which have been given I advise that the judgments be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
Cullen, CIl J., Edwabd T. Babtlett, Haioht, Vann, Hiscock and Chase, JJ., concur.
J udgments reversed, etc.