This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries.
On the night of December 31, 1895, at about eleven o’clock, the plaintiff disembarked from a train on the defendant’s suburban line at One Hundred and Thirty-third street and .Southern boulevard, New York city. The station at One Hundred and Thirty-third street is between the two sets of tracks and measures about one hundred and twenty feet in length and twelve feet in width. Passengers coming from trains pass along the platform .and through the station-room to reach the stairs leading to the street. Access to the station-room from the platform is had by two sets of swinging glass doors separated by a vestibule. The width of the vestibule, and, therefore, the space between the two sets of doors, is four feet three inches. Each separate door is three feet wide. The doors of each set, when closed, join without overlapping, but when the doors of each set on the same side are pushed back towards each other as far as possible from opposite directions, they overlap one foot nine inches. Each door is six feet in height with tiled wood panels from bottom rail to lock rail — a space of three feet six inches. From lock rail to top rail the door is of glass. From the lock rail up, the glass is protected Tby four slats placed about two inches apart. The view through the intervals between the slats, and through the glass about them, is unobstructed.
Describing the. accident, the plaintiff states that on leaving the cars she entered the vestibule through the swinging door at her left, the one generally used by disembarking passengers. Then the opposite door was violently swung towards her, striking her in the face, or adopting her own language: “ I was after getting through one of the doors, and was facing for the next swinging door, when the door swung and struck me there (indicating right side of forehead). * * * I was struck by the door in the-
There is no .proof that the defendant had notice that the stranger would demean himself in a manner dangerous to his fellow passengers. There is no evidence that he was intoxicated or boisterous, or violent, or in a condition requiring either his exclusion from the station, or a watchfulness of his movements. He was lawfully a passenger, one to whom the defendant was bound to sell a ticket. For his sudden negligent act the defendant is not liable. Putnam v. Broadway, etc., R. R. Co., 55 N. Y. 108; Thomson v. Manhattan Railway Co., 75 Hun, 548.
The judgment must be reversed.
Feeedmak, P. J., concurs; MacLeau, J., taking no part.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.