12 A.D. 551 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
On the 25th of June, 1893, the plaintiff, who was a boy about ten and a half years old;, was a passenger on the defendant’s train from Mott Haven to the Grand Central Station. Just after the train entered the station the boy had gone from the inside of the car out upon the platform, and while there the ears ran violently against each other and he was thrown off and received the injuries of which lie complains, and to recover for which this action is brought. It is claimed by the plaintiff, and the evidence of his witnesses tended to show, that, as the train was entering the station, and after the engine had been detached from it, some person in the employ of the railroad company applied the air brakes so quickly that the impetus of the train was at once stopped and several persons who were standing on the train were thrown down, and others only saved themselves from falling by grasping at the rails or the seats ; and that it was this sudden stoppage of the train which threw the plaintiff off the platform.
One of the witnesses of the defendant, however, testifies that he , was the person who applied the brakes and thus caused the sudden stoppage of the train, and that it was done after the plaintiff fell from the car and because he saw that the boy was about to roll under the wheels. But the evidence of this witness was in conflict with that of the plaintiff and several of his witnesses, and the jury might have found that the stoppage took place as claimed by the
The serious question in the case is whether, as a matter of law, the plaintiff showed himself to be free from contributory negligence, or whether, upon the evidence, the jury might have found that he was free from it. The Railroad Law of 1892 (Laws of 1892, chap. 676, § 53) provides that “No railroad corporation shall be liable for any injury to any passenger while on the platform of a car * * * in violation of the printed regulations of the corporation posted up at the time in a conspicuous place inside of the passenger cars then in the train.” The defendant claims upon this appeal that the facts bring this case within the provisions of this statute, and, consequently, that it is free from any liability on account of this injury to the plaintiff, which took .place by reason of his being upon the platform. If that point were in the case it would be an interesting question whether, under all the circumstances, the statute applied to this action, but it was not raised upon the trial. When the plaintiff closed his case no proof had been given to show that the facts existed which brought the case within this statute, and no motion for a direction by the court, founded upon the statute, was made. The defendant gave ¿vidence tending to Show that the notice required by the section above quoted was upon each door of the car in which the plaintiff sat. At the close of the defendant’s evidence its counsel again moved that the court direct a verdict, but its motion was not foimded upon any right which the defendant acquired because it had complied with the provisions of this statute. Indeed, the statute does not seem to have been mentioned in connection with the motion, or the attention of the court in any way called to its provisions. Had it been, it would have been competent for the plaintiff to give proof upon the question whether or not the defendant had complied with the statute and thereby released itself from liability; but, as the defendant had claimed no exemption from liability for its negligence because it had complied with the statute, there was no reason why the plaintiff should offer any evidence or why the court should take any notice of the proof made in
It appears that' the plaintiff was a boy about ten and bn e-half years old. His story is that he had taken his passage at Hott Haven with another boy; that, just before the cars started, he and his companion entered and took their .seats about the center of the car ; that he sat there until the train approached the Grand Central Station and the car had entered the station. At that time, he says, the other passengers arose and went towards the platform and that he went with them, some going before him and some aftér him. He says that he went upon the platform after the cars got into the station;, and while they were still moving at a comparatively rapid rate; that other- passengers were upon the platform; that á man, who was ahead of him, went down upon the step and off the car, and after this man had stepped off he stepped upon the lower step, holding the railings with both hands; that, as he stood upon the bottom step, this concussion came and his hold upon the railings was broken loose and he was thrown upon the station platform, whence he rolled under the car, which passed over' one of his fpet.
His story is corroborated by his companion,’ and to a considerable extent by some of the passengers. ■ It is contradicted by the witnesses sworn on behalf of the defendant, whose testimony is to the effect that this boy went out upon the platform and jumped off the car while it was in motion, and this injury was received at the result. The plaintiff and his companion both deny positively that the jfiaintiff jumped off the car. There was a severe conflict of evidence as to whether he was thrown from the step by the concussion or jumped off before the car stopped, and the jury would have been justified in finding either state of facts.
The court submitted the question of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff to- the jury, with instructions that it was for them to say whether the plaintiff was of sufficient physical ability and intelligence to be allowed by his parents, in the exercise of ordinary care and prn- ' deuce, to ;go at large in the- city of N ew T ork without any one to •watch over or care for him, and the jury was told that if he were not of such ability or intelligence, then it was negligence on the part of
The case seems to have been properly submitted to the jury, and the judgment and order should be affirmed, with.costs. .
Barrett, Williams, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.