DocketNumber: 4047
Judges: Kane
Filed Date: 3/10/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
This was an action for damages for personal injuries, commenced by the defendant in error by her next friend, plaintiff below, against the plaintiff in error, defendant below. Upon trial to a jury there was verdict for plaintiff, upon which judgment was duly entered, to reverse which this proceeding in error was commenced.
It was alleged that the plaintiff, a child about five years old, was riding with her mother, who had purchased a ticket upon one of the defendant's passenger trains, and that she was injured by being thrown from the seat, where she was quietly sitting, by a sudden and heavy jerk of the train forward, and that the jerk was due to the carelessness and negligence of the defendant. The grounds for reversal which we deem it necessary to notice may be stated as follows: (1) The plaintiff was not a passenger, because she did not purchase a ticket and did not pay her fare upon the train, but was riding free with her mother, who had purchased a ticket. (2) There is not sufficient evidence to establish negligence on the part of the defendant. (3) The court erred in certain instructions given to the jury. (4) The verdict of the jury is excessive and appears to have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice.
The general rule is that where one is on a passenger train of a railroad company, and there for the purpose of carriage, with the consent, express or implied, of the company, he is presumptively a passenger. 4 Elliott on Railroads (2d Ed.) vol. 4, sec. 1578. In the case of Southern Railway Co. v. Lee (Ky.) 101 S.W. 307, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 837, the court held that the fact that no fare was paid for a child by the person in charge of him upon the train did not prevent him from being a passenger, where he was riding with the knowledge and consent of the conductor.
The injury was inflicted while the train was in motion, running between two stations. In answer to questions put to her on direct examination, touching the manner of the injury, Mrs. Fitts, the mother of the injured child, testified as follows:
"A. The train leapt forward right hard and threw her out of her seat. * * * Q. Whereabouts were you at the time *Page 687 that that jerk occurred? A. I am not positive where it was at, It was somewheres between Durant and Ardmore, however; somewheres thereabouts Madill. * * * It give a jerk, and jerked her out of her seat, and liked to have jerked me out. Q. Did she fall? A. Yes, sir. Q. Where did she fall? A. She fell and struck the seat right in front of her. * * * Q. You speak of that jerk being hard. Did it affect you sitting in your seat? A. I had a baby in my lap, and it liked to jerked him out of my lap, and liked to jerked my head off. Q. Was it beyond the ordinary jerk of a train? A. Yes, sir; I should say it was. * * * Q. You have been on trains, haven't you, and rode on trains? A. Yes, sir; a few times. Q. You have felt the ordinary and usual jerk from trains? A. Yes, sir; I felt it that day until I got that one. Q. Well, did you ever feel a train jerk as hard? A. No, sir."
Another witness, a passenger, testified as follows:
"Q. Did anything happen while you were on the train with Mrs. Fitts that day to Vira Fitts? A. Yes, sir; she got seriously hurt on the train. Q. Well, explain to the jury now, you say she got hurt, how she got hurt. A. Well, sir, the train gave a jerk and threw her out of the seat and struck her forehead here on the arm, on the seat right in front of her. * * * Q. Do you know what had been done to the train just before the accident occurred? A. No, sir; I don't. Q. What? A. No, sir; I don't know what happened to the train, but it gave a terrible jerk, and liked to have jerked me off the seat. I was sitting in the seat nursing Mrs. Lauderdale's baby, and it liked to jerked me off my seat."
The contention of counsel for the railroad company is that the foregoing evidence and other circumstances shown by the record present a case identical in principle to St. Louis S.F. R. Co. v. Gosnell,
We think the case at bar belongs to the foregoing class. The train upon which the plaintiff was riding was a passenger train, equipped primarily for the carriage of passengers. One reasonably may expect to ride on the modern passenger train, not only in comparative safety, but with a considerable degree of comfort. We venture to say that a railway company, of which it could truthfully be said that a jerk of sufficient violence to throw a child five years old out of her seat where she was quietly sitting, and "liked to have jerked" two adults out of their seats, and "liked to have jerked the head off" one of them, was an ordinary occurrence, would not enjoy the patronage of the traveling public to any great extent. We therefore conclude that evidence tending to show the occurrence of a lurch or a jerk of a passenger train of sufficient violence to throw from the seat whereon she was quietly sitting as a passenger a child five years old, painfully injuring her, and to almost throw from their seats two adult passengers, justifies an inference of some breach of the duty owed to the injured person by the carrier, and casts the onus upon it of relieving itself of responsibility by showing that the injury was the result of an accident which the exercise of due skill, foresight, and diligence could not have prevented.
In such action, where the evidence of the plaintiff makes out a prima facie case, which is rebutted by the evidence on the part of the carrier, it is not error to refuse to take the case from *Page 690 the jury. It is their duty to pass upon the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of their testimony.
We have examined the instructions, the giving of which counsel for defendant assign as error, and are of the opinion that, considering them in connection with all the other instructions given, they are substantially correct. Some of the objections urged against them have been fully answered by what we have heretofore said; the balance, we think, are without merit.
Whilst the verdict is larger, perhaps, than the members of the court would render, if sitting as jurors, there is nothing in the record to indicate that the action of the jury was in any way influenced by any bias, passion, or prejudice against the defendant. We are therefore precluded from setting the verdict aside as excessive.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
All the Justices concur.