116 N.Y.S. 518 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Plaintiff’s intestate, a girl of twelve years of age, was sent to the defendant’s station, which was likewise the village post office (the postmistress and the station agent being one and the same person), for her father’s mail. She stepped out of the front door of the post office onto the station platform and was struck by a passing train, running at thirty-five miles an hour, and killed. The clear space of, the platform the jury might have found was less than five feet wide, and the theory of the plaintiff is that the decedent was caught in the swirl of the passing train and drawn toward it across this narrow platform and was struck by the cars. Bo one saw the accident; the nearest approach to an eye-witness was one who saw the child rolling along the platform after she had been struck, and
On the question of contributory negligence the courts have held that'comparatively slight evidence will support a judgment where the person injured is killed, and 'there is ho eye-witness of the Occurrence, for the obvious reason, that to hold otherwise would be to deny justice in many instances. It is plain that the dbcedenit had not left the platform; that she had not stepped upon the track, for it is not claimed- by any one that she was -struck by the engine. The platform, was.less than five feet in width in front of the door; she. had only just stepped out a moment before the accident, and it is unthinkable that a girl of twelve years of age would have delib
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Present —- Hirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Jenks, Rich and Miller, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.