120 N.Y. 467 | NY | 1890
The plaintiff suffered personal injuries which she alleges were occasioned by the negligence of the defendant.
- This question of negligence in the present case was for the jury, and, therefore, the motion to dismiss the complaint was properly denied.
And. there was no error in the refusal of the court to charge, as requested, that the plaintiff was bound to wait in the car, where she was in a safe place, until the coupling was complete. The consideration of this proposition is embraced in ;what has already been said. The exercise of due care required her to wait until she was induced by what an employe announced, and by it was permitted to suppose and did believe that the cars -were so coupled. The court had charged the jury quite fully upon that subject, and the question was submitted to them whether the plaintiff was chargeable in any respect with negligence in proceeding when and as she did, to pass from the car in which she was to the other one, and they were instructed that if the plaintiff was not entirely free from negligence, she could not recover. The case was a close one, but the facts essential to a recovery by the plaintiff were not-without evidence for their support. There seems to have been no error in any of the rulings to which exceptions were taken.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.