158 N.Y.S. 681 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1916
Plaintiff sued to recover damages for personal injuries. It appears that she boarded a passenger train of the defendant at. East Orange, N. J., and, in walking up the aisle of the car, -tripped over
Plaintiff’s testimony and that of one Fisher was-, that as soon as the passenger train stopped at the station in East Orange she was the first passenger to go up the steps of the car, and enter that particular end of it; that no brakeman was standing at the car steps, by which she had entered; and that after she had gone a few feet she stumbled over a large suit case, which almost filled the aisle of the car. As against the plaintiff’s proof, the defendant showed by two witnesses that the plaintiff went up the steps of the car preceded by a man or boy with a suit case, and followed by the owner thereof. The defendant farther proved by the positive testimony of the witness Otis that the suit case was brought into the car at the same station at which the plaintiff got on, and that it was placed in the seat occupied by the witness, and left there with the end protruding about six inches into the aisle. This would indicate that the suit case was placed in the aisle without the knowledge of the defendant’s employees, and immediately prior to the accident. Where an injury results from something improper or unsafe in the appliances of transportation, the burden is on the carrier to prove that such injury- did not result -from its negligence. Property belonging to, and taken by a passenger into, a óar is not such an appliance. The mere fact that a piece of baggage is in the aisle and a passenger stumbles over it, does not per se raise any presumption-of negligence on the part of the railroad company. Burns v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co., 233 Penn. 304; Van Winkle v. Brook
Guy and Whitaker, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, new trial granted, with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide event.