DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 176
Judges: Audenried, Beaver, Beeber, Orlady, Porter, Rice
Filed Date: 3/21/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
The appellant was a passenger on one of the cars of the defendant company, and in alighting therefrom she received injuries for which she claimed damages in this action. She entered the car at about 9:30 o’clock in the evening to ride to her home. She was familiar with the route and the place where she desired the car to stop, which was opposite the dwelling house of her brother with whom she resided. She had lived in that neighborhood for several years and had.frequently used the cars in her travel to and from this place. The trolley track was laid on a public road, and close to the left side of the track there was a drainage ditch or gutter which, near to the place where the accident occurred, was spanned by a wooden bridge that was used as an entrance to her brother’s property, and at which point the trolley cars frequently stopped to receive and discharge passengers. On the opposite side of the trolley track was a smooth level roadway or street. The appellant on former occasions had gotten off a car on each side of the track and well knew the location of the bridge, gutter and track. She testified : “ I looked at the conductor, made a .sign to stop, and as he stopped at the bridge crossing into the drive, and that was
The car was standing at the time in response to her signal to the conductor; there was a lighted gas lamp about twelve or fifteen feet from the place; the car was well lighted and there was an electric light directly over the platform from which she stepped.
There is no evidence in the case tending to show that this point on the suburban trolley road was a regular stopping place; that the bridge was a landing place for passengers, nor that this passenger was requested or directed by the conductor to alight at this particular place. The passenger knew the location.as well as the conductor, and, without suggestion or invitation from any source she elected to adopt a hazardous line of conduct and to step from the car on the side which involved some risk instead of stepping from the right hand side of the car, which would have assured a perfectly safe landing place. There is no doubt or uncertainty about the facts attending the accident, and unfortunately for her, she miscalculated the distance in the dark, and her error of judgment was the sole cause of the injuries she suffered.
She had been carried safely; the car, so far as the evidence shows, stopped promptly at the point indicated by her, and remained so until she stepped from the platform.
There is nothing in the case to warrant a verdict against the defendant, and the court properly directed the verdict in the company’s favor.
The judgment is affirmed.