180 A.D. 585 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
The first of these actions is to recover for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff therein, who for brevity will be referred to generally as the plaintiff, and the other is by her husband to recover the resulting damages to him. The actions were tried together. .
The defendant is a common carrier of passengers for hire and owns and operates the Hudson river tubes and the subways in the borough of Manhattan connected therewith. One of its stations is at Christopher street and the entrance is through a building on the northerly side of Christopher street and by four flights of stairs, descending a distance of about ninety feet making at least one turn, with a platform or landing at the foot of each. From the bottom of the stairway a concrete platform extends on a level a distance of about fifteen feet to a ticket office and connects, on the same level, with the platform at which the trains stop.
The negligence with which the defendant was charged in the complaint was in allowing snow and slush to accumulate on this platform on the 3d of April, 1915.
The plaintiff resided near the Christopher street station; and at about ten o’clock in the morning of that day, accompanied by her sixteen-year-old daughter she entered the Christopher street station and boarded a train and left the subway at Fourteenth street, and after doing some shopping they returned the same way, alighting from the train at the Christopher street station at about noon. It seems plaintiff had paid fourteen cents for their return fare and on alighting she was given tickets which entitled her to a rebate of four cents upon presenting them at the ticket office which she did. She testified that she then proceeded toward the stairway and that while she was closing her pocket book and when she was within about three feet of the foot of the stairs “my left foot went out from under me and I fell right down on my left side.” She did not testify that she slipped and this is the only explanation she gave with respect to the accident excepting that she testified that when they went down the stairs in the morning she noticed that it was wet at the foot of the stairs for about three or four feet where snow had been blowing down and had settled at the bottom of the steps, to a depth of about one-half an inch in some places and in some places more; and that she fell on slush which wet her through to the skin and that before she fell and while she was approaching the stairs she noticed that “ it was all slush ” on the platform near the stairs, and she testified on redirect examination that her foot did not turn under her. Plaintiff says the snow was thick on the sidewalk when they first entered the station in the morning and that there was snow at the place where
On the part of the defendant testimony was given tending to show that a porter whose duty it was to sweep the stairs and platform had swept the platform once that morning and sprinkled sawdust on it and was sweeping it again at the time of the accident and that there was no snow or slush upon it and that the only moisture on it was that brought by the feet of the passengers; that there was a revolving door on the stairway at the second landing; that there was no depression in the platform as claimed and that plaintiff fell on one of the lower steps. Two statements made by the plaintiff and her daughter to the claim agent for the defendant were also received in evidence in which there was no mention
The recovery cannot be sustained in any event owing to an error in the charge. It is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff “ was caused to slip and fall on the snow and slush lying on ” the platform; and that the resulting injuries were sustained solely through the negligence and carelessness of the defendant in failing to keep the platform in a safe condition for travel and in permitting it to become in a dangerous and unsafe condition. No defect in the platform was charged. The general allegations of negligence do not even tend to state a cause of action excepting as they are connected with the facts stated with respect to the existence of snow and slush on the platform. Counsel for the defendant requested the court to charge that if there was a depression in the platform it did not contribute to the accident and that the jury must not consider the question as to whether or not there was a depression in the platform at the place where the plaintiff claims to have fallen. The court in declining so to charge said to the jury: “You have heard the testimony. The question is whether these premises were in an unsafe condition, and if in an unreasonable and unsafe condition, whether it was due to the negligence of the defendant,” to which counsel for the defendant excepted. Counsel for the defendant thereupon requested that the jury be instructed that the defendant was under no obligation to maintain doors on the stairway and this was declined and an exception duly taken; but the court finally instructed the jury that there was no specific requirement of law obliging defendant to maintain a door, but the question was whether under the circumstances defendant was guilty of negligence in allowing the premises to become in an unsafe condition. The requests with respect to the depression in the platform were not technically accurate, but the instructions which the court gave the jury in declining the requests were erroneous. The jury might well have understood in view of the reception
We are also of opinion that if there be any evidence of defendant's negligence upon which the plaintiff was entitled to have the case submitted to the jury the verdict is clearly against the weight and preponderance of the evidence, and should not be permitted to stand. (See O’Keeffe v. Mayor, 29 App. Div. 524; Strong v. Long Island R. R. Co., 129 id. 361; Rusk v. Manhattan R. Co., 46 id. 100.) The jury would perhaps be warranted in finding that some of the snow blew down and the rest was carried down from the street on the feet of pedestrians. It had been storming less than three and one-half hours when the accident occurred, and while the storm lasted it is manifest that it would require diligence beyond the duty imposed upon the defendant to remove from this part of the platform all snow and moisture thus brought down upon the platform as rapidly as it came there. There is nothing to indicate that the accident was due to the amount of snow or slush on the platform if indeed it has been connected in any manner with the snow, slush or water.
The duty which the defendant owed passengers with respect to this passageway was only ordinary care. (Kelly v. Manhattan R. Co., 112 N. Y. 443; Rusk v. Manhattan R. Co., 46 App. Div. 100; Weldon v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R. Co., 159 id. 649; Strong v. Long Island R. R. Co., supra; Meginn v. Ramsdell, 163 App. Div. 232. See, also, Palmer v. Pennsylvania Co., 111 N. Y. 488; Weston v. N. Y. Elevated R. R. Co., 73 id. 595; McGuire v. Interborough Rapid, Transit Co., 104 App. Div. 105.) Although the same rule of ordinary care is the measure of a carrier’s duty with respect to the platforms to and from which passengers are obliged to step on alighting from and boarding trains, it was held in the Weston and McGuire Cases (supra) that this duty required greater vigilance with respect to the care of such platforms and might require that sand or ashes or other material be sprinkled upon the platform at such points even during the continuance" of a storm which rendered the platform slippery and dangerous owing to the fact that the surface thereof had become lumpy and uneven and icy; but in Kemp v. N. Y. C. & H.R.R.R. Co. (135 App. Div. 773) it was held, in effect, that the authority of the decision in the Weston case should be confined to the facts upon which the adjudication was made and not extended to a rural station platform of a single-track steam railroad. In the Meginn Case (supra) it was held that failure to remove
It follows that the judgments and orders should be reversed, with costs, and the findings of the jury reversed and the complaints dismissed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Page and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Judgments and orders reversed, with costs, and complaints dismissed, with costs.