| 1843 - 516 стор.
...want of proper skill or care of the driver placed the passengers in a state of peril, and they had at that time a reasonable ground for supposing that...little or no injury if they had remained in the stage. Ib. 4. (Same.) If the driver was a person of competent skill, and in every respect qualified and suitably... | |
| Samuel Hazard - 1840 - 468 стор.
...attempt of the plaintiff or his wife to escape may have increased the peril, or even caused the atage to upset, and although they may also find that the...and his wife would probably have sustained little or DO injury if they had remained in the stage. 4. If the driver was a person of competent skill and in... | |
| Samuel Hazard - 1840 - 466 стор.
...want of proper skill or care of the driver placed the passengers in a state of peril, and they had at that time a reasonable ground for supposing that...little or no injury if they had remained in the stage. 4. If the driver was a person of competent skill and in every respect qualified and suitably prepared... | |
| Alexander Ralston Tiffany - 1859 - 656 стор.
...of the driver, the attempt of the plaintiff or his wife to escape may have increased the peril, or caused the stage to upset ; and although they may...little or no injury if they had remained in the stage. [If a passenger in a coach, by reason of a peril arising from an accident for which the proprietors... | |
| Richard Peters - 1860 - 836 стор.
...state of peril, and they had at that time a reasonable ground for supposing that the stage would upsetj or that the driver was incapable of managing his horses,...would probably have sustained little or no injury had they remained in the stage. Ibid. 18. If the driver was a person of competent skill, and in every... | |
| Edward Warren Hines, William Pope Duvall Bush, John Cleland Wells, Frank L. Wells, Findlay Ferguson Bush, Horace C. Brannin, William Cromwell, W. J. Chinn, Walter G. Chapman, R. G. Higdon, Thomas Robert McBeath - 1887 - 1032 стор.
...want of proper skill or care of the driver placed the passengers in ii state of peril, and they had at that time a reasonable ground for supposing that...of its servants, the passenger is placed in such a perilou- condition as to render it un act of reasonable precaution, for the purpose of .self-preservation,... | |
| 1888 - 912 стор.
...entitled to recover; although the jury may believe from the position in which the stage was placed from the negligence of the driver, the attempt of the .plaintiff...little or no injury if they had remained in the stage. 4. If the jury shall find that the driver was a person of competent skill and in every respect qualified... | |
| Charles Andrew Ray - 1893 - 914 стор.
...even caused the stage to upset, and although they may also find that the plaintiff and his wife would have sustained little or no injury, if they had remained in the stage.' Junes v. £iti/ci', 1 Stark. 408, was followed in Ingalh v. Ji-ifJ-g, 9 Met. 1, 43 Am. Dec. 34*5, and... | |
| 1897 - 830 стор.
...want of proper skill or care of the driver placed the passengers in a state of peril, and they had at that time a reasonable ground for supposing that...little or no injury if they had remained in the stage. 4. If the jury shall find that the driver was a person of competent skill, and in every respect qualified... | |
| John Milton Gardner, Walter James Eagle - 1901 - 800 стор.
...his wife to escape may have increased the peril, or even caused the stage to upset, and although they also find that the plaintiff and his wife would probably...little or no injury if they had remained in the stage." And in the case of Jones v. Boyce, 1 Starkie, 482, (1), which was an action against a coach proprietor... | |
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