89 N.Y.S. 584 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The plaintiff has recovered a 1 judgment for injuries sustained from the fall upon her of a telescope satchel from a rack on the-side of, the car, while she was a passenger on the fast train known as the Empire State Express, on June 29, 1900. The allegation of negligence in the complaint is as follows: “ That at the time the plaintiff was received as a passenger aforesaid upon the train of the-defendants, the said defendants were negligent and careless in the management and operation of the said train, in that they permitted and allowed a certain large satchel to be placed in the rack along-the side of said car near the top in an unsafe and dangerous position, while said train- was being moved at great speed and said car was being violently swayed and agitated.” The evidence produced upon the trial failed to establish the- negligence thus alleged,- and the plaintiff’s recovery, therefore, cánnot be sustained.,
On the day named the plaintiff ¡was journeying from the city of New York to Utica -in company with her room-mate, Miss Grace Mason, and two Misses Crafts. - The satchel was a large one belonging to Miss Mason, was completely filled, and was carried to the car by her, and by her placed in the rack in the plaintiff’s presence. The-plaintiff saw her place it in the rack and noticed that it projected over the edge, what she first said was A a few inches, but finally thought as much as six or seven inches. The appearance-of the satchel as-placed in the rack did not seem to suggest danger to the plaintiff, who-sat at the commencement of the journey in the seat directly behind it, over which the rack projected. Miss Mason sat' next the window in the seat in front of-the plaintiff, with one of the Miss Crafts by
The necessary inference from the evidence is that the satchel was properly placed in the rack at the start, and that the ordinary and usual motion of a fast train in the course of two and a half hours had gradually moved- it until the center of gravity projected beyond the edge of the rack. I cannot see how this fact in itself, without some evidence of a situation calculated to excite apprehension exist.ing for an appreciable period before the accident, justifies a charge •of negligence on the part of the conductor or the trainmen. There was no evidence that any of them saw the satchel at all, still less that a sight of it at any time before the moment that it fell would have suggested danger. The rack was there for the purpose of receiving just such baggage. There was nothing unusual in the satchel beyond the fact that it was large and heavy, but not so large and heavy that it could not be carried by a woman and lifted by her unaided into a high rack. The plaintiff testified: “ I saw her put this satchel up in the rack. She did it alone; I did not help her.” There being nothing extraordinary about either the satchel itself or
The judgment and order should be reversed.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event. ;