155 N.Y.S. 744 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The plaintiff’s intestate, Weakley, was in poor health, suffering from a nervous breakdown, and at the time of his death was under the influence of liquor and had not taken any food for that day. He was riding with his wife upon the defendant’s car from Utica to Amsterdam. As the train approached Amsterdam his wife informed him that they were arriving at Amsterdam. She carried a part of the baggage out upon the platform, entered the car and took the remaining baggage, and then discovered that her husband was not following her. She told the trainman that the man should get off, and they rapped on the window to him and attracted his attention. He merely turned around or moved, whereupon the trainman put his stepping block upon the platform of the car as the train was about starting, and after it had started the trainman pulled the bell rope but the train continued. Later the trainman asked Weakley if he knew that he was supposed to get
It was a dark, wet night and about eleven-thirty-seven when the train stopped at Hoffman’s. The verdict rests upon the theory that the conductor was negligent in putting a man in Weakley’s apparent condition from the train at the place where he did. The defendant’s rules require the conductor, in case a passenger refuses to- give up his ticket or pay his fare, to cause the train to be brought to a stop at a regular station, or near some dwelling house, and request the person to leave the train, and if he refuses to remove him therefrom. They further provide: “ It should not be in such a place, in such weather, or such unreasonable hour as might ordinarily endanger the health or safety of the person ejected. The person ejected must not be a child, a person of unsound mind, or in such feeble or helpless condition as to be unable to take care of himself or herself at the point where ejected.”
The fact that the conductor asked a bystander to take charge of Weakley is some evidence that the conductor knew he was unable to take care of himself. The knowledge which the company had of the man being carried by his station, of the efforts of the wife and trainman to get him from the car, of his attempt to leave the train with his shoes off, and all the circumstances, gave notice to the company that there was something the matter with him.
The rule governing the conduct of a conductor under such circumstances is a fair test of the duty of the defendant. The jury may well have determined that Weakley was causód to leave the car at such a place, in such weather and at such an unreasonable hour as might endanger his safety, and that he was in such a helpless condition as to be unable to take care of himself at the point where ejected. It is evident that he was not able to take care of himself. The only question is whether the conductor or the company had notice of that condition.
The judgment and order-should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.