151 N.Y.S. 919 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiff entered on the verdict of a jury in an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by a passenger while about to alight from one of defendant’s trains at Forest Hill, New Jersey. Plaintiff testified that she bought a ticket and became a passenger on defendant’s train at Jersey City; that when the train reached Forest Hill, it stopped and she
The evidence shows that the train was a vestibule train from which passengers could not alight without the removal of the vestibule covering of the steps by defendant’s servants; that the platform erected for the use of passengers at that station was on the north side of the track, but that, the main part of the town and the railroad station being on the south side, it had been a long established custom, with the acquiescence of the defendant company, for passengers to alight on the south side from trains coming in on the westbound track.
In addition to testimony tending to show defendant’s freedom from negligence and plaintiff’s contributory negligence defendant offered proof tending to establish that plaintiff had actually fully alighted from the car before the accident, and offered in evidence decisions from the New Jersey law reports in support of the defense set up in the answer pleading the law of New Jersey, which decisions hold the established law of New Jersey to be that where a passenger alights from a train on the side opposite the platform side, even with the acquiescence and approval of the carrier, upon so alighting he ceases to be a passenger, becomes a mere licensee and can only recover from the railroad company for damages occurring through wanton or wilful negligence on the part of the company. The law of New Jersey, though at variance with the established law in this state, must govern in this case; but the decisions offered in evidence by the defendant stating the New Jersey law are not ap
The questions of defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s contributory negligence were properly submitted to the jury.
The judgment must, therefore, be affirmed, • with costs.
Pendleton and Shearn, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.