This action was brought to recover damage for a personal injury. The plaintiff was a passenger on the defendant's vestibuled train known as the Royal Blue Line leaving Washington about noon on the 20th day of December, 1894, and arriving at Jersey City about six o'clock of the same evening. As the train was nearing the station at Jersey City the conductor or guard called out, "All out, Jersey City last stop." The plaintiff then got up and began to get ready to leave the train. He had been sitting a long time without standing. He straightened his limbs, smoothed his clothing, looked at his watch and then put on his overcoat, after which he picked up his umbrella and bag and started toward the door. The conductor or guard stood facing the door of the *Page 111 vestibule, which had not as yet been opened. The plaintiff then leaned against a partition and stood waiting for half a minute, during which time the train was still in motion, but moving smoothly and without any jar or jerks. The guard then opened the vestibule door and stepped across to the vestibule of the other car. At this the plaintiff, supposing the train had stopped, stepped out into the vestibule, took the rail with his right hand and passed down the steps and thence off on to the platform. As he did so he fell and both feet were crushed, one above the ankle and the other across the toes. It appears that he stepped from the train while it was in motion and was just entering the depot shed. He was unable to describe just the manner in which his feet were crushed, but it is supposed that they were run over by the wheels of the car. There was a light in the vestibule of the car and the plaintiff saw the steps, three in number, as he passed down from the vestibule, but did not see the ground. The guard was partially facing him as the plaintiff passed out of the car into the vestibule, but gave him no warning or intimation that the car had not stopped.
Upon these facts the trial court dismissed the complaint, and we think, properly. In the case of Solomon v. Manh. Ry. Co. (
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and judgment entered upon the nonsuit affirmed, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY, O'BRIEN, LANDON, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc.