193 N.Y. 362 | NY | 1908
At the close of plaintiff's evidence defendant's counsel moved for a nonsuit upon the ground that the plaintiff had failed to make out any cause of action; had not shown any negligence on the part of the defendant which was the proximate cause of the accident; *364 had failed to show freedom from contributory negligence. The plaintiff's counsel asked to go to the jury upon the question whether the plaintiff exercised due care in view of all the circumstances; also upon the question of the plaintiff's alleged contributory negligence and defendant's negligence. The trial judge granted the motion for a nonsuit and denied plaintiff's several requests to go to the jury. The plaintiff duly excepted to the rulings of the court. The court thereupon ordered that the exceptions be heard at the Appellate Division in the first instance. The Appellate Division overruled the exceptions, denied motion for new trial and dismissed the complaint, with costs.
The plaintiff is a farmer residing in Chili, a town in Monroe county, situated about ten miles from Rochester, being the first station west of that city on the defendant's railroad. At the time of the accident, which occurred August 27th, 1905, between midnight and one o'clock in the morning, the plaintiff, in alighting from a train on a very dark night, fell so that the wheels of the car passed over his left arm, necessitating amputation at the shoulder a few hours later. The plaintiff, on the day in question, joined an excursion to Niagara Falls with his family, Mr. and Mrs. Miller, neighbors, and their family, and three hired men; the party consisted of twelve persons. After visiting Niagara Falls the party arrived in Buffalo on their return at six o'clock P.M. and waited until 10:30 P.M. for the first train stopping at Chili station. The train consisted of a number of cars, and being crowded the party were compelled to go through two or three cars to the forward one, which was next the engine, there being no baggage car on the train. It is in evidence that in the front portion of the car there were no lights, no trainman with lantern, and the curtains, or most of them, were pulled down; also, that there was no light on the rear of the engine; that the station at Chili was unlighted and closed at the time the train arrived; that it was a very dark night, and no objects could be seen when looking off from the front platform of the forward car. The Chili station was on the south *365 side of the track. Mr. Miller testified that when the conductor came in he gave him his ticket, and when he observed that it was for Chili, he said: "What, Chili, and I says yes, and there is twelve of us to get off, and he says, don't be asleep when you get there."
It was proved that when the train stopped at Chili the forward car was from fifteen to eighteen rods east of the station. On this evidence the jury could have found eighteen rods, which is nearly three hundred feet. It was also proved that at the point where the plaintiff and Miller alighted, the distance from the lower step to the ground was from two and one-half to three feet; the jury could have found it three feet; that in front of the station there was a platform which extended to the track, nearly on a level with it.
It appears that a short interval after the call of the Chili station by the conductor, or trainman, the plaintiff and four of his party started for the front door of the car. All of them swore that they neither saw nor felt any motion of the train, and supposed it had stopped. Miller testified as to the situation while he and the plaintiff were standing on the platform just before alighting, as follows: "I didn't feel any motion whatever in the car; there wasn't no motion we could see, and if there was we wouldn't have got off; it seemed to be perfectly still; there was no motion in the engine; Mr. Bartle stepped off ahead of me; as he stepped off the step I was behind him; I stepped off immediately after him; I fell on my hip and struck my head on the gravel there * * *."
The plaintiff testified: "I walked down the steps, and of course I could not see whether it was the very last step or not, but I went down a step or so, and stopped to see if the train was stopped, and I was sure it had stopped, and at that I stepped off; I couldn't tell what happened when I stepped off; the next I remember was when I got up."
The judgment of nonsuit rests upon the assumption that defendant was free from negligence, and that alighting from a train while in motion is presumably an act of contributory *366
negligence on the part of the plaintiff. These questions were clearly for the jury to answer, and it was error for the trial judge to direct a judgment of nonsuit. The learned Appellate Division cites Solomon v. Manhattan Railway Co. (
These remarks were made in a case where the plaintiff boarded a moving elevated train in New York city and was injured by coming in contact with a water pipe, receiving fatal injuries. It was proved that the plaintiff's intestate had traveled over this route many times and was perfectly familiar with the situation. It was held his legal representatives could not recover. In
In Bartholomew v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co. (
Brooks v. Boston Maine R.R. Co. (
In Delamatyr v. Milwaukee Prairie Du C.R.R. Co. (
In the case at bar we have a situation for the jury to determine whether it justified the plaintiff in assuming that the train was not in motion, and that it was incumbent upon him and his party to alight from the train in pitch darkness as speedily as possible, and failing to do that, they would be carried to Rochester in the middle of the night. There is also sufficient evidence requiring the trial judge to submit to the jury the question whether the defendant was guilty of negligence in the manner of arriving at the Chili station on the night in question. The situation is described as very dark, and the plaintiff was, in the language of Judge ANDREWS already quoted (
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
CULLEN, Ch. J., VANN, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT and CHASE, JJ., concur; HAIGHT, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed, etc.