212 N.Y. 112 | NY | 1914
This' is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff while in the service of the Boston and Albany Railroad Company as a telegraph operator at East Green-bush, Rensselaer county, on the afternoon" of Sunday, March 6th, 1910. The duties of the plaintiff were mostly performed in a little building called a lobby which is furnished with telegraph instruments and switches to be operated by the person in charge. This lobby was connected by telegraph with a general office of the railroad company at Springfield to which the plaintiff was accustomed to make reports and from which he received orders to be communicated to passing trains. On the evening in question a passenger train numbered 361 was due from Springfield at the East Greenbush lobby at about 6:33 p. m. going west toward Albany. Ordinarily such a train would not stop at that point; but shortly before it was due the plaintiff received a message from Springfield which read substantially as follows: “To
Upon receiving this telegram plaintiff took a red lantern and went out. He says it was then dusk — not real dark but dark enough to have hght instead of signals. As soon as train No. 361 came in sight about a quarter of a mile off he began to signal it to stop by swinging his fight across the track. There was a general custom of the railroad pursuant to which an engineer when signaled to stop responded to the signal by giving two blasts of the whistle. The plaintiff heard no such blasts but remained on the track until the train had approached within about sixty feet of him when he stepped off to a side path of trap rock about two feet below the track level. Here he shouted to the engineer to stop, holding his lantern in his hand right in front of him when the deadwood of the locomotive struck his hand and the lantern, injuring his hand and breaking the lantern all to pieces. According to the plaintiff the train proceeded about a quarter of a mile beyond the lobby and then came to a stop.
According to the testimony of the engineer and fireman on the train they did not see the plaintiff’s red lantern or discover his signal to stop the train although maintaining a watchful lookout as they approached the East Greenbush lobby. It appeared, however, that another red fight was observed by the fireman when the train was about six hundred feet east of the lobby. He exclaimed to the engineer “Red fight! ” whereupon the engineer applied what he calls a good .hard service brake, thus checking the speed of the train and bringing it to a stop at a point which he fixed as about five hundred or six hundred feet west of the lobby. As the engine passed the place where the plaintiff stood the engineer saw a flash of white fight but nothing more.
Upon these facts a verdict has been rendered charging
The case is not one in which, owing to carelessness on
For these reasons I favor a reversal of this judgment, and the granting of a new trial, costs to abide event.
Werner, Hiscock, Collin and Cuddeback, JJ., concur; Miller and Cardozo, JJ., dissent.
Judgment reversed, etc.