Connolly v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co.

Decision Date27 May 1941
Citation34 N.E.2d 494,309 Mass. 177
PartiesCATHERINE CONNOLLY v. BOSTON ELEVATED RAILWAY COMPANY.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

May 13, 1941.

Present: FIELD, C.

J., DONAHUE LUMMUS, DOLAN, & RONAN, JJ.

Negligence, Street railway: station.

Evidence, which went no farther than to show an unexplained fall of a passenger in a subway station of a street railway company did not warrant a finding of negligence of the company.

TORT. Writ in the Superior Court dated May 10, 1937. The case was tried before Broadhurst, J.

M. H. Tobin, for the plaintiff.

J. E. Hannigan, (E.

M. McMahon with him) for the defendant.

RONAN, J. The plaintiff left a subway train at the defendant's station at Harvard Square, in Cambridge, and was proceeding along a concrete platform or ramp, one hundred sixty-five feet long and forty feet wide, which had a descending five per cent grade and served as a passageway for passengers who intended to take surface cars, when she fell and was injured. The judge, upon leave reserved, set aside a verdict for the plaintiff and entered a verdict for the defendant, subject to the exception of the plaintiff. The plaintiff having inadvertently lost the right to prosecute her exceptions, the judge reported the case to this court.

The ramp was damp or wet, at the time of the accident, from moisture which had been tracked in by the large number of passengers who use it in going from the subway trains to the surface cars. A subway train arrives every four minutes at this station and discharges a hundred or more passengers who travel along this ramp. The plaintiff testified that she was walking down the ramp with hundreds of people; that "she just fell" that she did not observe anything about the platform or ramp near where she had fallen; that she saw quite a "bit of dirt" but she did not know whether she fell on that that the dirt seemed as if some one had walked upon it; that it looked as though somebody had stepped on it or whether that caused her to fall; that she did not know the size of the area covered by the dirt, but it might have been an inch thick, soft in some places and hard in others; that she did not know "what made her fall"; that the platform was as wet as it is on a damp day; and that she had frequently walked on platforms that were as wet as was this one at the time of the accident. There was testimony from another witness that there was an accumulation of hard dirt or mud, an inch thick, which was located upon the ramp three feet from the wall of the subway. The report states that there was no evidence where this mud or dirt came from. We have summarized all the material evidence relative to the issue of liability.

The plaintiff could not recover unless she proved a breach of some duty that the defendant owed to her as a passenger. A common carrier is bound to exercise a degree of care consistent with the conduct of its business to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition for the use of its passengers. Ward v. Boston Terminal Co. 286 Mass. 517 . Klein v. Boston Elevated Railway, 293 Mass. 238 . Holton v. Boston Elevated Railway, 303 Mass. 242 .

Even if the ramp became wet as a result of its use by large numbers of...

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