205 Mass. 32 | Mass. | 1910
The plaintiff, while boarding a" train in the Seollay Square station of the subway, fell into the space between the car and the platform and received the injuries complained of. At the close of the evidence the judge directed a verdict for the defendant, and at the request of counsel reported the case for the determination of the full court. If the ruling was right judgment is to be entered for the defendant. If the case should have been submitted to the jury judgment is to be rendered for the plaintiff for $1,500 damages.
We assume in the plaintiff’s favor that the evidence would have warranted a finding that she was in the exercise of due care. She testified in substance that on account of the crowd she could not look down so as to see where she stepped, and that her movements were constrained by the crowd around her. She also testified that, although she paid no attention to the space between the platform and the car, it was because “I thought I had been going along and I felt that I was safe, and knowing that there was a platform there and feeling that it was used I didn’t feel unsafe or uncertain about the ground.” We are not prepared to say that the question of the plaintiff’s due care might not properly have been left to the jury. See Plummer v. Boston Elevated Railway, 198 Mass. 499.
But we fail to find any evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. The platform of the station was nearly straight for a part of the distance, and for the rest of it was on a concave curve. The extreme ends were very narrow, not over two feet. in width, and for a distance which was longer at one end than at the other the cars and the platform were nearly parallel, with a clearance of about three inches, which the testimony tended to show was the least that could be properly allowed for. Trains of different lengths were used at different hours of the day. During the hours when there was the heaviest traffic five-car trains were run, and during other hours trains of three and four cars. Of necessity, owing to the manner in which the subway was constructed, with which the defendant company had nothing to do, five-car trains overlapped each end of the platform. That was not so with three or four car trains. Underneath the permanent platform were five movable or sliding platforms for the purpose of bridging the space between the
The plaintiff contends that the defendant was negligent in not using the movable platform or some other appliance so as to lessen as much as possible the space between the permanent platform and the car, and thereby to guard against the danger of such an accident as occurred. But as was said in Hilborn v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 191 Mass. 14, 17, “There always must be a space between the steps of a car running through the subway and the platform upon which passengers
Judgment for the defendant.