Enslein v. Hudson & Manhattan Railroad

8 Misc. 2d 87, 165 N.Y.S.2d 630, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2885
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 Misc. 2d 87 (Enslein v. Hudson & Manhattan Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Enslein v. Hudson & Manhattan Railroad, 8 Misc. 2d 87, 165 N.Y.S.2d 630, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2885 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

Louis L. Friedman, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by her on Saturday, September 27,1952, at about 11:30 in the morning, due to a fall on a moving escalator which was located at the Journal Square station in Jersey City, New Jersey. The defendant Pennsylvania Railroad Company, (hereinafter designated as “ Pennsylvania ”) owned the station and had leased it to the defendant Hudson & Manhattan Railroad Company (hereinafter designated as “Hudson”). The defendant, The Peelle Company (hereinafter designated as Peelle) had installed the escalator in February, 1952, seven months before the accident, and maintained and serviced it pursuant to the terms of a written contract.

On May 29,1953 plaintiff fell again while she was in the living room of her home. She alleges that this second fall was caused by a severe dizzy spell, which occurred as a result of the injuries sustained by her in her accident in September of 1952, and she asks for damages for the immediate injuries resulting from the first fall, as well as for the consequential damages sustained as a result of the second fall.

At the time of the original accident, plaintiff was a passenger of the defendant Hudson, having ridden on its train from New York City to the Jersey City station. Leaving the station from the train level, she was required to go upward to the street level, and in order to do so, went upon an ascending escalator. This escalator was one of two located at the station and has been referred to upon the trial as the wider one. The only difference between the two escalators was that the wider one accommodated two persons on any one step, while the narrower one could only accommodate one person. The two escalators were located side by side, adjacent to and parallel with each other, and the movements of the steps were controlled either upward or downward through the use of a starting key which could be turned in either direction. Plaintiff said that she was accompanied at the time by a niece, the niece’s husband and their two minor children, and that after the two children had gotten on the wider escalator, side by side, the niece and her husband got on to another step, [90]*90also alongside of each other. Plaintiff then mounted a step which was one or two steps below the niece. The escalator had ascended several steps when it suddenly jerked and lurched, 'causing her to lose her balance, fall backwards, and strike her head on one of the iron steps. She said that she immediately 'became unconscious, remembering nothing thereafter until she found herself on the upper floor of the station being ministered to by some people. Medical aid was offered to her by some of the employees of Hudson, but she refused it, preferring instead to go to the home of a relative in New Jersey, where she remained for several hours and then returned home. When she ascertained that her injuries did not permit her to take care of herself, and since she lived alone, the niece remained with her overnight, and the next day she was taken to her son’s home in Yonkers where she remained in bed for several weeks, receiving medical attention during that time. She then returned to her own home, continuing to receive medical treatment, this time from her own physician who had been treating her theretofore for diabetes, and after several additional weeks in bed in her own home, attended by a neighbor, she started to walk about. The proof is convincing to this court that plaintiff sustained a concussion of the brain as a result of that first fall, the result of which concussion left her with severe headaches and dizzy spells, and that it was one of these dizzy spells which caused her to fall again on May 29, 1953 as a result of which latter fall she sustained additional injuries in the region of her right hip.

Plaintiff’s testimony as to the manner in which the accident happened, was corroborated by both her niece and the niece’s husband. They described the jerk or lurch as being severe enough to make the niece, too, lose her balance, but the niece’s fall was prevented by the action of her husband, who, standing alongside of her, was able to grab and support her. In addition to the testimony of these two relatives, the testimony of the plaintiff was corroborated by one Rev. Otto Louis Schreiber, a Lutheran minister, whose church was located in Jersey City, and who testified that he happened to be on the descending smaller escalator almost adjacent to the spot where plaintiff was when he suddenly heard a scream, looked in the direction of plaintiff and saw her topple down. He was a stranger to the plaintiff at that time, but, seeing the accident, he immediately ran to the bottom of the escalator upon which he was descending, then to the adjacent one on which the plaintiff was then lying unconscious and which was then still ascending, ran up the steps and lifting the plaintiff up, supported her until the portion of the escalator where they were then standing [91]*91had reached the upper floor. He remained with her until she recovered consciousness, and helped to take her to the office of one of the Hudson employees, which was located on a lower floor. The witness said that while he was on this ascending escalator supporting the plaintiff, the escalator jerked and lurched and ran in such an unusual manner, that it was readily ascertainable to him. Cross-examination failed to weaken his direct testimony, but rather buttressed it, as it was then brought out that he was a frequent user of the station and the escalator, and on a number of prior occasions had noticed and observed it operating with the same jerking and lurching motion as occurred at the time of the accident.

The witnesses called by the defendants gave detailed testimony as to the operation of the escalator, its component parts and safety features. Although there was some difference of opinion between the experts as to whether an escalator such as this one, could have been in any way defective without coming to an immediate stop, the sum total of their testimony was to the effect that it could not lurch or jerk in the manner described without one of the safety features coming into operation and thus stopping the escalator from moving any further. If that happened, said the defendants, the escalator could not then be again started without the use of a key. All of the expert witnesses admitted, however, that as a mechanical device, there could be defects which required repairs from time to time, and that a new escalator such as the one now being discussed, was particularly amenable to such defects because it was necessary for some time after it was put into operation, to watch that operation so as to eliminate the “ bugs ” or “ kinks ” which exist in every new installation. The proof shows that Peelle did in fact make repairs and replacements to this escalator even though it was a comparatively new one.

The expert witness called by defendant Peelle, inspected the escalator some months after the accident, and after describing the details of its construction and manner of operation, he admitted that a new escalator has “ bugs ” and “ kinks ” for a number of months after installation, and that it is necessary to inspect such an escalator from time to time in order to insure its smooth performance. He admitted that parts which at first glance appear to be perfectly safe and satisfactory, sometimes prove defective under the strain and stress of operation, and that it is only the operation of the escalator itself, which reveals that such defects may exist.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Misc. 2d 87, 165 N.Y.S.2d 630, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enslein-v-hudson-manhattan-railroad-nysupct-1957.