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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Toal v. The North British Railway Co. [1907] ScotLR 45 (31 October 1907)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1907/45SLR0045.html
Cite as: [1907] SLR 45, [1907] ScotLR 45

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 45

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

[Sheriff Court at Glasgow.

Thursday, October 31. 1907.

45 SLR 45

Toal

v.

The North British Railway Company.

Subject_1Railway
Subject_2Reparation
Subject_3Negligence
Subject_4Duty of Railway Servants to Shut Carriage Doors on Re-starting Train from a Station.
Facts:

A railway passenger, who had alighted from a train, but was still standing on the platform, was knocked down on the re-starting of the train by the door of one of the railway carriages which had been left open, and received injuries. He brought an action of damages against the railway company on the ground of negligence, the negligence averred being the having set the train in motion without having closed the

Page: 46

carriage door. Held that the omission to close the carriage door was not negligence rendering the defenders liable in damages, and action dismissed as irrelevant.

Headnote:

On 13th March 1907 John Toal, craneman, 5 North Street, Springburn, Glasgow, raised an action in the Sheriff Court at Glasgow against the North British Railway Company, to recover £300 as damages for injuries sustained through the alleged fault or negligence of the defenders.

On 17th November 1906 the pursuer was a passenger on the defenders' railway from Falkirk to Glasgow. About six o'clock p.m. on that day, when the train arrived and stopped at College Street Station, Glasgow, the pursuer alighted, and while standing on the platform was struck and knocked down, on the re-starting of the train, by the open door of one of the railway carriages. After the train had passed the pursuer fell upon the rails and sustained the injuries in respect of which he sought damages.

The pursuer averred—“When said train was stopped at said platform there were no porters or officials on the platform to see that the doors of the carriages were closed before the train was re-started. It is the duty of defenders, and is the invariable practice of railway companies, to close the doors of compartments before a train is allowed to leave the station, but this the defenders and their servants culpably and negligently failed to do on the occasion of this accident to pursuer. The defenders and their said servants were also negligent in respect that they set said train in motion without closing said door.”

On 24th July 1907 the Sheriff-Substitute ( Boyd) closed the record and allowed a proof before answer.

The pursuer appealed for jury trial. The defenders objected to the relevancy, and the case went to the summar roll.

Argued for the defenders and respondents—The action was irrelevant and should be dismissed. There was no issuable matter, for there was no relevant averment of negligence. There was no duty on the defenders to see that every carriage door was closed. But if there was a duty to see that the carriage doors were closed, it was to close the carriage doors before the train left the station, not to do so before the train was set in motion. In any case the fault alleged as to the doors did not directly conduce to the accident, and the pursuer's own case disclosed contributory negligence on his part, viz., that he remained within reach of the door when the train re-started.

Argued for the pursuer and appellant—The action was relevant, and issues should be ordered. The open door was the direct cause of the accident. The platform was provided for the passengers, and re-starting the train with the doors open constituted a danger to the passengers on the platform, and amounted to negligence rendering the defenders liable in damages. That was averred on record. There was a duty on the company's servants to close carriage doors— Metropolitan Railway Company v. Jackson, 1877, 3 App. Cas. 193, Lord Cairns at p. 198. The defenders made no averment as to the time elapsing between the pursuer's leaving the train and its being afresh set in motion, so the matter of contributory negligence could not be dealt with de piano on the averments. The onus was on the defenders to aver and prove contributory negligence— Wakelin v. London and South-Western Railway Company, 1887, 12 App. Cas. 41, Lord Watson at p. 47—and that question was one suitable for the jury.

Judgment:

Lord President—I am unable to find in this record a relevant averment of negligence against the defenders. The pursuer sets forth that on a certain date he travelled in a train which stopped at College Street station. He alighted. He then says that while he was standing on the platform—he does not tell us how long he had been standing there—he was struck and knocked down by an open carriage door and his leg slipped down between the platform and the train. The train was in motion at the time the pursuer was struck, and after it had passed the pursuer fell on to the rails. Now, the only facts that are there given to us are, that the pursuer got out of the train, that he stood upon the platform, and that while there he was knocked down by an open carriage door. He must, of course, necessarily have been so close to the edge of the platform as to permit of the door knocking him down. The only averment of negligence that is made in these circumstances against the company is this—“It is the duty of the defenders, and is the invariable practice of railway companies, to close the doors of compartments before a train is allowed to leave the station.” I say in passing that this “leaving the station” is rather an ambiguous phrase, and I rather fancy that the writer of the sentence which I have just read meant by “leaving the station” really the starting of the train. The only doubt raised in my mind as to that is that in the next sentence he says this—“The defenders and their said servants were also negligent in respect that they set said train in motion without closing said door.” However that may be, I take the last averment as being the substance of the negligence averred, viz., that there was negligence in respect that the train was set in motion without the doors being closed.

I think that is an impossible averment of negligence to allow to go to a jury, seeing that it is common knowledge, from the practice of railway companies, and indeed from the necessities of the case, that a great deal of the service of suburban trains would be practically impossible if it were absolutely necessary to close every door before the train was allowed to start. That it is a quite proper precaution for railway servants to close the doors, so far as they can, before the train starts I do not doubt, but that is a perfectly different thing from saying that if a door is not closed before the train is allowed to move, there is negligence on the part of the

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railway company. There is no averment that the train was started so quickly as to give no proper opportunity to alight. All that is said is that it is negligence because the train was started while a door was still open. I do not think that is common sense. I think, therefore, your Lordship should dismiss this action as being wanting in relevancy of averments against the Railway Company.

I think that is a safer ground to go upon than what was also urged on us—the disclosure of contributory negligence on the part of the pursuer in bar, because, although no doubt I do think the chances, so to speak, are all in favour of it being the man's own fault that he allowed himself to be struck by the door of a railway carriage while on the platform, still that is not a universal proposition. There may have been circumstances in which he was not able to get away, and the proof of contributory negligence must, of course, lie upon the person who is alleging it, namely, the defender. But before the defender is put to any such proof there must be a case of negligence against him. It is there I think that this case fails, and I am therefore for dismissing the action.

Lord Kinnear—I agree. I only add that I do not find any averment that the defenders did not give the pursuer time to alight, and that he was knocked down before he had time to step from the carriage to a safe place. There is no averment of that kind, and in the absence of an averment of that kind I think the case rests exactly as your Lordship has put it.

Lord Dundas—I also agree. I only add that to my mind the case is an extremely plain one.

The Court dismissed the action.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuer (Appellant)— J. A. Christie. Agents— St Clair Swanson & Manson, W.S.

Counsel for the Defenders (Respondents)—The Solicitor-General ( Ure, K.C.)— Grierson. Agent— James Watson, S.S.C.

1907


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