193 A.D. 56 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
The defendant operates a subway electric train sérvice running through the boroughs of The Bronx and Manhattan, in the city of New York. As a part of said subway system the defendant maintains an elevated station at One Hundred and Seventy-fourth street in the borough of The Bronx. The plaintiff, by occupation a nurse, on June 15, 1917, in boarding one of the defendant’s south-bound subway trains at the said One Hundred and Seventy-fourth street station, stepped into a narrow space, which she describes as eight inches in width, between the station platform and the defendant’s car which she was about to enter, and fell and sustained the injuries for which she seeks to recover in this action. Plaintiff testified that she went tó the said station on defendant’s road between the hours of four and five o’clock in the afternoon with the intention of boarding a south-bound train to Ninety-sixth street, and there transfer to a Broadway car to carry her up to One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street. She testified that after a wait of five or ten minutes the train pulled in and that one passenger alighted; that there were three or four passengers besides the plaintiff intending to board the train at that point; that as the plaintiff went to step into the car she put her foot forward across the space between the car platform and the station platform, to and upon the car platform, and then started to enter the car; that as she did so the foot which she had placed upon the
At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove any negligence on the part of the defendant or her freedom from contributory negligence, which motion the court denied.
' Some evidence was given by the defendant tending to prove that the space between the station platform and the car platform was less than eight inches, as testified to by the plaintiff, and did not exceed about four and one-half inches,
The action was submitted to the jury by the court upon the question of the alleged negligence of the defendant in the construction of its station platform, and the existence of the alleged defective opening between the station platform and the entrance platform to the defendant’s cars stopping at said station. In this respect in the main charge of the court the jury were instructed as follows: “ Briefly the plaintiff claims that she entered upon the platform of the defendant’s line at 174th Street upon a station of what is commonly known as the old subway and that as she proceeded to enter the car from the station platform her foot slipped and that her leg went into an opening which she claimed was eight inches wide between the train and the platform. * * *
“ First, you should consider whether or not this opening or space complained of was an excessive opening and one which a reasonably prudent railroad would have seen was apt to be dangerous to a passenger using ordinary care. If it was not, of course, your deliberations would end then, because the mere happening of the accident is not sufficient upon which to base a claim for damages. If it was an excessive and dangerous space then you must determine whether or not the company in the exercise of ordinary care should give passengers warning by precautionary words' or otherwise, that there was an opening there. You must determine whether or not that warning should have been given, and if it should have, whether or not it was given in this case.”
To such charge of the court counsel for the defendant duly excepted, and requested that the jury be further instructed in the following language: “ Mr. Jones: I except to that portion of your Honor’s charge wherein you submit to the jury the question that they may determine whether or not the opening was excessive and also that portion of your Honor’s charge in which you submit to them the question of defendant’s negligence upon the failure or alleged failure of any warning to have been given, and I ask your Honor to charge the jury that they cannot predicate any negligence upon the construction or the manner in which this station was built.”
This, also, the court charged. Counsel for the defendant further requested: “ I ask your Honor to charge the jury that an open space of eight inches between the car -and the station platform is not negligence as a matter of law.”
To this request the court also acceded. Counsel for the defendant further requested the court to charge as follows: “ I ask your Honor td charge the jury that if they find the plaintiff knew of the opening, there was no occasion to give her any warning.”
To such request the court replied as follows: “ I will decline to make any charge based upon what the jury might find from the evidence. I leave the question of fact entirely to the jury. I will charge any rule of law which you may request and that I approve of. Mr. Jones (counsel for defendant): If they find that she knew; that it was found by them as a fact then the law says that there is no occasion to warn — exception. The Court: I have already charged the jury to that effect. Mr. Jones: Your Honor distinguished it saying whether she knew it when she was stepping. The Court: If the jury find from the evidence at the time that she stepped, the plaintiff knew that the open space was there and knew what the space was, of course, no warning by the defendant was necessary, that is common sense. Mr. Jones: I except to the limitation ‘ at the time she stepped.’ The Court: Knew it at any time. Mr. Jones: While she was on the platform if she either knew that it was there or saw it, then there was no occasion to warn. The Court: Yes, the reason I limited it to that time is because there is no evidence that she was ever on the platform before, that is what I meant.”
The foregoing colloquy between court and counsel completed the court’s instruction to the jury.
It seems to me that by the final charge of the court every issue which the court in its main charge had submitted to the jury was eliminated. ' The court first charged the jury in effect that they might find a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, if they found
Placing upon the testimony the strongest interpretation in plaintiff’s favor, I do not think she was entitled to go to the jury. Under the evidence there were but two possible grounds upon which the defendant could have been found negligent. First, was it negligent in the construction of its station platform, with the intervening space, eight inches, between it and the entrance platform of defendant’s cars? and, second, was the defendant negligent in failing to warn the plaintiff of the existence of such space? As to the first, it may be said that
Under the evidence in the case the jury could not find the defendant negligent for failure to warn. The only advantage of warning the plaintiff would have been to have apprised her of the existence of the open space. She testified positively that before the accident she knew of the space at this station and specifically testified that she saw the open space before she attempted to step across it. There is no testimony presented showing that after seeing the space immediately prior to stepping, her attention was in anywise diverted therefrom. The knowledge which she admitted upon the witness stand that she possessed would have been in no degree increased by any warning which the defendant could have
I think upon the plaintiff’s evidence that there was no question of fact for the determination of the jury, and that plaintiff’s complaint should have been dismissed, and that the failure of the court to grant defendant’s motion for a nonsuit was error.
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and plaintiff’s complaint dismissed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Smith and Greenbaüm, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.