Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
On September 28, 1978, plaintiff, then age 41 and concededly an obese woman, weighing between 180 and 230 pounds, was injured when she slipped and fell on the train platform while attempting to board a Long Island Railroad Company (LIRR) train at defendants’ Northport station. Plaintiff, together with her daughter, Diane, had been visiting plaintiff’s son at the Veterans Hospital. After
As plaintiff attempted to board the train, she placed her right hand on the railing of the car to lift herself onto the first step, when she slipped on a slippery substance on the station platform breaking the heel of her shoe, which went onto the tracks. Plaintiff had not seen the substance before since it blended with the black platform. She described it as “dark * * * oil and sticky and gooky”. Diane, who had already boarded the train at the time, described it as “a splat of melted oil,” with “a line running through it, indicating where mommy’s foot had went throgh [sic] it.” Diane admitted she had not observed the substance until after the accident, when she left the train to aid her mother. According to plaintiff, the substance was no larger than an inch or an inch and a half. However, both the conductor and the brakeman observed no “splat,” liquid or substance, either on the platform or on plaintiff’s heel, which had been retrieved from the tracks. The trainman, Kempster, conducted an inspection of the platform which failed to disclose anything oily or slippery, although he did notice scratches in the blacktop surface as a result of plaintiff’s heel breaking off, “but there was no oil”.
Following the accident, plaintiff was treated in the emergency room of Huntington Hospital and, after returning to her home, was admitted the next day to St. Barnabas Hospital. There were a total of six hospital admissions, with four operative procedures performed to relieve the back pain, including three laminectomies. Subsequent to plaintiff’s discharge from St. Barnabas, she was involved
As a common carrier, defendant is held to a high standard of care, requiring the exercise of the highest or utmost caution for the safety of its passengers. However, while the operative standard does not make the carrier an insurer, it is “bound to use its utmost skill and vigilance to guard against the possibility of accidents from the condition of its road and of the machinery used in the transportation of passengers.” (Stierle v Union Ry. Co.,
A lesser standard of care, however, has been imposed with respect to approaches, station platforms, halls and stairways, under which the carrier is held “to exercise ordinary care, in view of the dangers attending its use, to make it reasonably adequate for the purpose to which it was devoted.” (Lafflin v Buffalo & Southwestern R. R. Co.,
This standard of ordinary care was applied by us in Boettcher v Dowling (supra) where plaintiff fell on a slippery and muddy floor at the arcade of defendant’s subway station. Similarly, in White v New York Cent. R. R. Co. (supra) ordinary negligence principles were held applicable where plaintiff, about to board a train, tripped over the suitcase of another passenger which had been left on the station platform by defendant’s porter. Likewise, in McSween v Murray (
The law has never exacted of common carriers an absolute duty to maintain approaches and station platforms in a condition so as to render it impossible for a passenger to slip or become injured. Rather, the standard is to exercise reasonable care under the circumstances. Except in cases where the defendant created the condition, thus constituting actual notice to establish a prima facie case, a plaintiff must prove actual or constructive notice of the dangerous or defective condition and a reasonable time within which to correct or warn about its existence. (Boettcher v Dowling, supra; Sikora v Apex Beverage Corp.,
The same principle, requiring a showing of actual or constructive notice to establish plaintiff’s prima facie case, has been imposed in personal injury actions against a municipality or a lessor, requiring either proof that defendant created the condition or had a sufficient opportunity, within the exercise of reasonable care, to remedy the situation (Madrid v City of New York,
Applying these principles here, we find the record palpably insufficient to have warranted the submission of the
As an alternate theory of liability, plaintiff raises on appeal the principle expressed in Sheridan v Brooklyn City & Newtown R. R. Co. (
Accordingly, the judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County (Robert C. Williams, J.), entered November 23, 1982, upon a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff, should be reversed, on the law, without costs or disbursements, and the complaint dismissed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in result only, solely upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient upon which to find that the defendant created or had the requisite actual or constructive notice of the presence of the alleged slippery or foreign substance on the station platform (Donohoe v Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.,
Ross and Carro, JJ., concur with Kassal, J.; Sandler, J. P., and Fein, J., concur in an opinion by Fein, J.
Judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County, entered on November 23, 1982, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs and disbursements, and the complaint dismissed.
