Kingsley v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad

80 A. 327, 81 N.J.L. 536, 52 Vroom 536, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 A. 327 (Kingsley v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kingsley v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad, 80 A. 327, 81 N.J.L. 536, 52 Vroom 536, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 166 (N.J. 1911).

Opinions

[537]*537The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mtktuen, J.

While attempting to leave the defendant’s passenger coach in the terminal at Iloboken, the plaintiff, a lady over sixty years of age, misjudged the distance between the step of the car and the station platform, and, instead of placing her foot upon the platform, set it between the step and the platform, and, falling, sustained the injuries for which she claims damages in this suit.

With a party of three, consisting of her son, and Dr. Davidson and his wife, she boarded the train at Grove street station, a suburban station of Newark, and arrived at Hobo-ken at about twenty minutes before eight o’clock in the evening. The car in which she rode was filled with passengers, some of whom preceded her in their exit, while others followed her. The members of her own'party preceded her, and, while she was in the act of alighting, Dr. Davidson, who immediately preceded her, turned to assist her, and found her wedged between the station platform and the car step.

The action is based upon the legal theory alleged in the declaration, that the defendant, in disregard of its duty, did not furnish a reasonably safe place in which to alight, and did not maintain its platform in such a manner as to be reasonably safe, and did not illuminate its platform in such a manner as to enable the plaintiff to safely alight. It will be observed, therefore, that the gravamen of the action is essentially the failure of proper construction of the defendant’s transportation facilities and a failure of maintenance in the supply of light.

The plaintiff’s testimony is the only evidence in the ease directed to the latter allegation, and she leaves it entirely clear that there was a sufficiency of light, ór, at least, that the absence of sufficient light was not the superinducing cause of her accident. Thus, the question was asked:

“Q. Well, it was lit; it (the depot) was illuminated?

“A. Certainly. Yes, indeed.

“Q. And did you notice that the lights were in the middle of the platform?

[538]*538“A. I did not notice any lights. There was no light that® was thrown down particularly on the steps.”

It is a matter of conspicuous comment, in view of the meagreness and want of evidential completeness of this testimony, and of its vital importance to the plaintiff’s case, that, if the defective condition of the lights in the terminal could to any extent account for this accident, not one of the plaintiff’s party, or one of the many passengers who occupied the coach with her, was called upon to supplement and support the allegation.

The efforts of the learned counsel for the plaintiff were directed in the main to establishing the negligence of the defendant upon its alleged failure to construct its car steps and platform in a reasonabty safe manner for the plaintiff tó alight, and it was sought to establish that contention by two methods of proof:

Fwst. By the testimony of an engineer and a lawyer who had made measurements of other cars in the terminals of other railroads, and secondly, by photographs taken by a photographer shortly before the trial, at the defendant’s terminal.

The case is before us upon exceptions taken by counsel for the plaintiff to the exclusion of questions put to those witnesses, and in two instances to the exclusion of photographs as well as generally to the direction of a nonsuit by the trial court at the termination of the plaintiff’s case.

The plaintiff sought to. prove, by her witness Higgins, a civil engineer in the employ of general railroad contractors, that there was a difference in measurement between the steps on cars operated by other companies, and the steps of this particular car, with relation to the, depot platform. Having proved not only that there was a difference, but also that the cars of the various lines selected for comparison varied with one another, and that there was not in use by any company what may be called a standardization of step or a generally accepted type of platform which could be utilized as a basis for comparison, he was asked:

“What, in your opinion as a civil engineer, is the proper distance to space a landing, platform from the gauge rail of [539]*539a track, with a view to all conditions of railroad traffic as you have become familiar with them?”

The trial court overruled this inquiry, and we think properly. The net result of this witness’s testimony was that he had never constructed a railroad platform or roadbeds, with a view to the accommodation of railroad traffic in a railroad terminal. Tfis experience was limited to employment with railroad contractors, and a more or less extensive familiarity with opinions based upon writing and views on railroad construction, which he had gleaned from a book and some periodicals dealing with that subject. His was not the ease of a competent constructive railroad engineer whose testimony in behalf of a theory of construction could be supported by constructive engineering work accomplished or directed by himself, the general principles underlying which had received the approval of recognized experts or text-writers of his craft whose works he might invoke to support his theory. Ho such responsibility had been thrust upon him, and he was ji radically in the status of a civil engineer who had read some theories upon the subject of railroad construction in books and magazines, which non constat ever were put into actual practice. That the book itself would not be evidence except for the purpose of contradicting the witness, is the settled law of this state. New Jersey Zinc Co. v. Lehigh, Zinc Co., 30 Vroom 189.

And, a fortiori, the interpretation put by a witness upon the language contained in the book, as the sole ground for his qualification as an expert, must be equally apparent. As was said by Mr. Justice Dixon, speaking for this court, in Laing v. United New Jersey Railroad Co., 25 Vroom 578: “The worthlessness of such testimony is hardly a stronger reason for its rejection than the practically limitless amount of it that might be produced.” See, also, Slate v. Maioni, 49 Id. 339.

The witness had demonstrated by measurements taken by him in different railroad terminals that no two railroads agreed in the method or form of ear step and platform construction, and that the entire method or form of construction apparently was a question of the adaptation of the platform [540]*540of the stations to the various types of rolling stock which the companies found it necessary to accommodate in their terminals, in an enormous interlocking system of transcontinental travel and commerce. That, under such circumstances, there may be differences of construction, must be apparent, even with the same railroad, but that difference of construction does not prove negligent construction, must be equally clear; and, therefore, the testimony of a witness based entirely upon the former theorjr, and in the absence of a single factor evidencing negligence of construction, was properly rejected.

The photographer presented four photographs showing conditions at the terminal shortly before the trial.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jacober v. St. Peter's Medical Center
608 A.2d 304 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1992)
Swenson v. Nairn
30 A.2d 897 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1943)
Williams v. New Jersey-New York Transit Co.
113 F.2d 649 (Second Circuit, 1940)
Eggert v. Mutual Grocery Co.
168 A. 312 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1933)
Predmore v. Dickerson
165 A. 867 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1933)
Geyer v. Pennsylvania Railroad
28 F.2d 1013 (Third Circuit, 1928)
Kuchler v. N.J. N.Y.R.R. Co.
140 A. 329 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1928)
E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. White
8 F.2d 5 (Third Circuit, 1925)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Ammann
296 F. 453 (Third Circuit, 1924)
Munroe v. Pennsylvania Railroad
90 A. 254 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1914)
Napodensky v. West Jersey & Seashore Railroad
88 A. 1033 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 A. 327, 81 N.J.L. 536, 52 Vroom 536, 1911 N.J. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingsley-v-delaware-lackawanna-western-railroad-nj-1911.