190 A.D. 160 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
The deceased was killed at about eight-thirty-eight p. m. on September 20, 1918, by a current of electricity received from the third rail on a railway of the appellant at Rockaway Park station. The station consisted of a platform 300 feet long, elevated 5 feet above the ground, together with a building at its extreme westerly end, which contained, among other rooms, an office for the dispatcher and a room for train crews. Railway tracks came into the station upon each side of the platform, and were joined by a crossover track a short distance to the west of the station building. At about six o’clock on the evening in question the deceased, who had worked all day as a flagman about one mile to the west, came into the station and requested extra work of the dispatcher. He was assigned as guard on a train then about leaving. Having made his trip he returned to the station at eight-twenty, gave in his time to a clerk, and went out upon the platform to take a train, bound west, for his home. There was a train due to leave at eight-thirty-two, but he may not have been in time to get aboard this train,, for he was seen going through the door of the crew room as the train was puffing out. The next train was due to leave at eight-forty. While the cars to make up this train were being shifted on the crossover between the tracks an automatic brake on one of them tripped, and the train stopped. Upon examination it was found that the object which tripped the brake was the body of the deceased, which lay dead upon the third rail of the crossover, about 20 feet west of the station building. It is not known how the deceased came to be at the point where his body was found. It was suggested by a fellow-employee that he jumped aboard a car of the eight-thirty-two
Award unanimously affirmed.