DocketNumber: File No. 3837
Judges: Polee, Smith
Filed Date: 12/31/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Plaintiff -brought this action to recover -damages for personal '-injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. He recovered judgment, and defendant appeals.
As grounds for a reversal of the judgment and order over-luling appellant’s motion for a new trial, appellant assigns numerous alleged errors of th-e trial court in the adtnission and rejection of testimony, in the giving o-f certain- instructions, and in refusing to give certain requested instructions to the jury. He also assigns the insufficiency -of the evidence to support th-e ve-r-■d-ict. If the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, it will be unnecessary to- consider the other assignments.
It appears from the testimony -of plaintiff that he was a resident of Peever; that, on the evening of the accident causing -the injury complained of, plaintiff was -a passenger on defendant’s train from Sisseton to Peever- — a, distance of about ten miles. The train, so far as this case is -concerned, consisted of two cars — a passenger coach and- a baggage car. The passenger -coach was a vestib-uled car, divided into -two- co-mipartments, and was in the rear of the baggage car. These cars were coupled together, and it is the manner of thi-s coupling that is alleged to constitute the negligence that -caused plaintiff’s injury. 'Said! negligence is alleged in plaintiff’s -complaint a-s follows:
“That the -couplings between the -said -two -coaches or cars are left uncovered- and- unprotected between the platforms of the said*490 cars, or coaches, upon which platform passengers must necessarily walk in entering and: leaving said coaches or cars; that between ■the platforms of said cars or coaches is a space and adjacent to the couplings thereof which' -is from 4 inches to 12 inches wide, as this plaintiff verily believes; that over this space or gap between the said platforms no cover was kept, 'and the same was so left that any one passing from one car to the other might easily get the foot into said space and between the said couplings; that this defective condition of said coaches or cars was well known to the defendant; that on the said: 6th day of April, 1914, the defendants carelessly and wrongful]-/ had the said defective coaches or cars in use for the purpose of carrying passengers.”
The train left Sisseton about 8 o’clock in the evening. The night was quite dark. Plaintiff rode in the forward compartment of the passenger coach, and he, with two- other men, were the only passengers in said compartment. The railroad track at Peever runs nearly due north and south, with the depot and platform- on the west side. When tire whistle blew for Peever, one of said men arose from- -his seat and passed out through -the rear doo-r of the compartment, and nothing further was seen of him. Plaintiff an-d the other passenger (Evans by name, and who¡ was a witness at the trial) arose from, their seats .and -started for the front door. Evans was ahead. He passed out into the vestibule -and -over onto the platform of the baggage car. He then stepped down onto- the lower step- of that car, where he stood until the train stopped, when he stepped, off onto- the platform in front of the depot and left without seeing -or hearing anything more of plaintiff. Plaintiff testified that he followed Evans to the front door of the car; that, just as he stepped through the -door, the car gave a heavy jerk and bum-p, an-d' -he fell down and felt an awful pain in -his foot; that the next thin-g- he knew he lay on the ground by the track; -and that some boys picked him up and 'took him home. After the train had pulled out of the station, four boys (or young men) found plaintiff lying on the ground, on the east side of the railroad track, about 100 feet north of -the depot, with all of the toes on his right foot bo badly crushed that -they had to be amputated. Hiis right shoulder and the -side of his head were also bruised and hurt. He further testified that there was an opening about 14 inc-hes wide -between the passenger coach and the
But it is the theory of defendant that plaintiff attempted to alight from the car from the east side, before the .train stopped, and, in so doing, fell, or was thrown, under the side of the car, and the wheel ran 'over his foot and injured it. Of course, there is no proof that the injury was caused in this way; neither is there any proof, beyond plaintiff’s conjecture, that he got his foot caught between -the cars. Defendant bases its theory upon, the fact ‘that .plaintiff lived on the east side of the track, and the witness Evans’ testimony to the effect that plaintiff told him, about the time the whistle blew for Peever, that he intended to get off on the east sid'e; 'that he had been away a couple of days and was in a hurry to> get home. Plaintiff, on cross-examination, denied that he had intended -to get off on the east side of.the car; but, when asked if he did not tell Evans that he intended to get off on the east side, he answered, “I do not remember,” but would not swear that he did not so state. Pie was also asked if 'h.e did
“I asked him' how it happened, and he said he got up to get out, and there were two men that were behind him, and he thought they .pushed him out through the door, and, in some way, he fell off.”
He further testified that plaintiff said he did not know how it happened.
It hardly seems possible that the accident could have occurred in the manner plaintiff says he thinks it did and the witness Evans know nothing about it. According to plaintiff’s testimony, he and Evans could not have been an arm’s length apart when they passed through the car door; but Evans was ahead' and, if plaintiff had been thrown down or thrown forward' by any sudden jerk or bump' (as he 'described it) of the car, he must inevitably have fallen against Evans. No person who was on the train, except
As a reason for his presence on the platform while the train was still in motion, plaintiff claims that the stop, at Peever was so short that a person who remained in his seat until the train stopped would not have 'had time to get off. In this contention he is not supported by the evidence. True, the witness Evans testified that he came from Sisseton to Peever the evening before the accident, and that, on that occasion, the train did not stop at Peever long enough for him to get off. But this was immaterial to- plaintiff's case: Eirst, because this fact had not been communicated to him until after the accident; and, second, plaintiff testified that he had frequently traveled from Sisseton to Peever on this same train, and that it had always stopped at Peever long enough for him to leave his seat and get off after the train had come'to. a full stop, so. that he had no reason to believe he would not have plenty of time to. g'et off after the train stopped.
In view of all the -circumstances connected with the happening of this accident, the explanation given by plaintiff immediately after its happening, and the absence of any positive or direct proof as to- how plaintiff was injured, we believe the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, and that a new trial should be awarded.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.