
    STREET RAILWAYS.
    [Mahoning (7th) Court of Appeals,
    October 6, 1917.]
    Mahoning Valley Ry. v. Minnie Gorz.
    Pollock, Metcalfe and Farr, JJ.
    1. Care Required of Street Railway as to One Assisting Passenger in Getting Child on Car.
    In the absence of a rule of the company or a custom permitting persons to enter its car, when it stops to-receive passengers, for the purpose of assisting passengers with children or baggage, a railway company, operating street cars by electricity over the streets of a city, is only required to exercise toward such persons ordinary care after it becomes- aware of their presence within the car.
    2. Street Railway Chargeable with Notice of Person on Car Assisting Child.
    Such railway company is chargeable with notice of the presence of such persons within its car, not only when those in charge of the car have actual notice, but when in the exercise of ordinary care they should have notice of their presence.
    3. Ordinary Care Charges Street Railway with Notice of Knowledge of Car Employes.
    Ordinary care charges such railway company with notice of what-' ever those in charge of the car should know in the proper discharge of their duties in the operation of such car.
    [Syllabus by the court.]
    
      Harrington, DeFord, Heins & Osborn, for plaintiff in error.
    
      Anderson, Lamb & Tetlotv, for defendant in error.
   POLLOCK, J.

This is an action in error and is brought to reverse a judgment obtained by Minnie Gorz against the Mahoning Valley By. in the eommon pleas court of this county.

Minnie Gorz, the plaintiff below, was a resident of the city of Youngstown, and on the afternoon of October 17th, 1915, her daughter, Mrs. Pritchard, with, her child two ' years old, was' • visiting her.

About nine o’clock on that evening the daughter-wishing to go home, Mrs.-Gorz took the child in her arms and in company with Mrs.- Pritchard walked down -Berlin" street to Federal street, upon which street the Mahoning Valley Ráilway Company, the defendant below, maintained its tracks and operated passenger cars over said trades by electricity. They signalled an approaching car which, when it reached the intersection of Berlin and Federal streets, stopped and four passengers alighted therefrom. This was a regular and usual stop for the discharge and receiving of passengers.

After these passengers alighted Mrs. Gorz set the child on the rear platform of the car, and just as she set the child down, and before she had released her hold on it, the car started and continued until it crossed Berlin street.

Mrs. Gorz claims that when the ear started it was started with a jerk, and she was thrown down on the steps of the ear with her feet hanging over the steps, and was dragged in that way across the street to where the car stopped. She did not intend to become a passenger on the car; she only intended placing the child on the platform and then withdrawing from the car and allowing the child’s mother, who intended to become a passenger, to take charge of the child.

This was a large car — possibly used in interurban traffic —with a partition across it, the front end being used as a smoking 'compartment and the rear end of the car occupied by ladies and other passengers.' This car had two steps leading down from the rear platform.

The conductor testifies that he was standing in the rear compartment, perhaps near the partition, looking through the windows watching the passengers leave the ear, and to see if anyone wished to become a passenger. He testifies that he did not see Mrs. Gorz.

The errors complained of are in the charge of the court, and also that the verdict is excessive. The first error which we will notice occurs in the charge.

. The court said to the jury that the word “dragged” as used by one or more of the witnesses, and also in the petition, would ordinarily mean that some portion of her body was dragged along the pavement, but he instructed the jury that they were not required to apply so narrow a construction, because under this pleading and under the evidence, whether her feet touched the pavement or not, if she was dragged along against her will forcibly by the car — whether she was lying on the car or had grasped hold of it after it had started — it would be within the meaning of the word ‘ ‘ dragged. ’ ’ No doubt this expression of the court was occasioned by reason of some remarks of counsel during the arguments of the ease, and the court couples what he says in regard to the petition with the language used by witnesses.

It is required of the court to explain the petition and construe the words or language used therein, but it should be left to the jury to determine the meaning of words used by the witnesses while testifying, and the court has no right to direct the jury to give to words used by the witnesses any other than their ordinary meaning, unless the words used had a technical meaning not known or understood ordinarily, and were so used by the witnesses. But the error complained of does not affect the substantial rights of the defendant below and for that reason was not prejudicial.

Again the court charged the jury in regard to the damages which the plaintiff below might recover that:

“If she is entitled to recover, she is entitled to recover that fair amount of damages that you say would be to her full compensation for that which you shall determine from the evidence you have before you she has suffered in the sense of damages to her person, as a result of what you have theretofore found was a negligent omission of duty on the part of defendant.”

It is urged that the court erred in using the expression “full compensation.” Mrs. Gorz was a married woman and there was testimony tending to show that she had received medical attention from two or three doctors; that she was unable to perform her household duties, such as washing, cooking, baking, etc., and the objection to this charge was that the jury would understand from the language that she had a right to recover for these things.

This objection would be well taken if there was no limitation or explanation in the charge of this language, but the court following this language limits the recovery to her pain and suffering and the disability inflicted upon her in the sense of affecting her ability to be up and about and to care for herself. The court by this part of the charge limits full compensation to her personal rights and the jury could not misunderstand the charge.

It is further urged that the court erred in the charge in regard to the care the railway company owed to Mrs. Gorz. After saying to the jury that this lady was not a passenger, but that the railway company owed a duty towards people who came for the purpose of assisting their friends, who had children or baggage, in getting on the car, and that that duty was not the high degree of care- owed to passengers but ordinary care, the court used the following language:

“In other words, while they did not know that she was there, yet the law assumes that knowing that she had a legal right to be there the same as their passengers had to be there, although in fact they did not know it, they were bound to exercise every such reasonable precaution for her protection in the situation such as an ordinarily prudent person or corporation ordinarily would, considering all of the situation and surroundings.”

Mrs. Gorz had a right to go out on the street with her daughter and child, who were intending to become passengers on ■this car. The street car company, and others using the street, ■must exercise ordinary care not to injure her. But, if she had remained on the street her injuries would not have occurred. It was only when she entered or placed her body within the car of the railway company that she received her injury. She did not enter this car to become a passenger, but to place therein this -child' who would become a passenger by reason of its mother being-a passenger.

The testimony does not disclose that there was any rule of the company or any custom permitting persons to enter the car, when stopped to receive passengers, for the purpose of assisting passengers who might have either children or baggage, or that it was necessary for Mrs. Gorz to assist her daughter to enter the car by placing this child upon the platform. What she did was only for her own or Mrs. Pritchard’s convenience.

When Mrs. Gorz entered this car as she did, and under these circumstances, the. railway company was not required tó exer.cise towards her the degree of care required of it towards its uassengers, but it owed her the duty of ordinary care after it was aware of her presence within the car. 3 Thompson, Negligence See. 2658; 2 Hutchinson, Carriers, Sec. 997.

The real question in this ease to be determined is the obligation resting upon the railway company to ascertain and know when a person not intending to become a passenger is within their car. There is no. testimony that the conductor or anyone in the railway company’s employ knew of Mrs. Gorz’s presence within the car, or that she was in such a position that the starting of the ear would injure her.

It was the conductor’s duty to stop the car a sufficient length of time to discharge and receive passengers; but in the absence of a practice acquiesced in by the railway company permitting persons who did not intend to become passengers to enter the car in order to give assistance to others who did, the railway company did not owe the duty of detaining its car to allow such persons to withdraw therefrom unless it knew of their presence therein. Neither was it required to know that all persons, other than passengers, had left the car before starting it. The obligation of the railway company to others than passengers who might be within the ear is not an absolute duty but a relative duty, and arises when those in charge of the car know of the presence of such person, or in the exercise of ordinary care should know of their presence. St. Louis & S. F. Ry. v. Lee, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 357; Hill v. Louisville & N. Ry. Co. 124 Ga. 243 [52 S. E. 651; 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 432]; Morrow v. Railway, 134 N. C. 92 [44 S. E. 12]; Berry v. Railway, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1410 [60 S. W. 699].

The conductor or those in charge of an electric street car are not required, when the car stops to discharge and receive passengers, to ascertain before starting if persons not intending to become passengers have entered the car, or have placed themselves on the steps of the car in such a position that they may be injured by the starting of the car, but they are chargebale with what they know and with whatever they should see and know in the proper discharge of their duties in operating the car. New York, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Kistler, 66 Ohio St. 326 [64 N. E. 130].

The court in its charge in the case at bar said that:

“While they did not know that she was there, yet the law assumes that knowing that she had a legal right to be there the same as their passengers had to be there, although in fact they did not know it”—

they were bound to exercise ordinary care.

By this charge the court said to the jury that Mrs. Gorz had a legal right to enter this car, to set the child on the platform, and that the railway company was bound in law to know that she was there although they in fact did not know it. This would require an electric street car company to know that everyone who did not intend to become a passenger had withdrawn from their car before they could safely start it, and is placing a greater burden upon the company with regard to third persons than is required with regard to their passengers.

If the conductor knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known, that Mrs. Gorz was within the car placing the child on the platform, he would be required to exercise ordinary care towards her, and in the exercise of that degree of care he should have delayed starting the ear until she could withdraw therefrom.

We think that the giving of this instruction was error which requires a reversal of the case. We find no other errors in the reeord.

Metcalfe and Farr, JJ., concur.  