Nelson v. Lehigh Valley Railroad

25 A.D. 535, 50 N.Y.S. 63
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 A.D. 535 (Nelson v. Lehigh Valley Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Lehigh Valley Railroad, 25 A.D. 535, 50 N.Y.S. 63 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Green, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the defendant in the operation of its railroad, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $3,500.

The plaintiff took passage upon one-of the defendant’s trains from Rochester to Jersey City. Shortly after passing Mauch Chunk, and whilst the plaintiff and her friends were sitting upon unfastened chairs in the dining car, partaking of their dinner, the car gave a violent lurch, the chair in which she was sitting tipped, and she fell [536]*536or was thrown diagonally backwards and struck upon her buttocks, in the aisle of the car.

According to the testimony of the plaintiff and several of her friends, .the train was going very fast,” and the lurch of the car and the accident occurred while the train was going around a sharp curve,” or very sharp curve.” The plaintiff says that she was sitting at a table in the dining car with three other women; that she and Miss Barnes were facing the engine, she (herself) being-next to the aisle, and the others were sitting at the opposite side of the table with their backs to the engine. In describing the. accident she said: Perhaps we had been in the car fifteen minutes when thére was a very severe lurch, and I was thrown forcibly against the table, the table striking me in the abdomen in the center. I grabbed at the table, but my hand slipped off, and just a second afterward there was another lurch, and I was thrown back. The chair tipped directly back and diagonally, and I went back diagonally across the car in a sitting posture, and my head struck the side of the car or something — it was hurt anyway. The force of the blow fell on the buttocks on the left-hand side with greater force and, at the end of the spine, but more toward the left hip .than the right. I should think I was thrown four or five feet from the chair. * * * Those chairs were not fastened. Miss Barnes was clinging to the table. She had taken hold of my dress sleeve to protect me from falling,_but her hand slipped off, and I sensed that she either let. go or I was yanked out of her hand. As I sat on the floor,' I noticed the rest having a general shaking up and laughing and trying to get back to their places.”

The plaintiff’s friends also testified that they were ■ greatly disturbed and shaken up by the lurch of the car, but none of them was thrown or fell to the floor. Miss Barnes says they were all thrown violently against the .table and then back; that in reaching out to save the plaintiff, she found that she was going to fall, and só clutched the table to save herself, and then looked around and saw the plaintiff on the floor. Mrs. Alglienes says she saved herself from being thrown by grasping her chair, and held out her arm to save her daughter, who was thrown against her, from falling. Miss A. says she remembers going half, on to her mother’s chair.' The Reverend Kiernan testified: There -was a noticeable movement of [537]*537the car. I don’t know that I can give a description of it any way any more than to say that I felt the movement of the car at the time. It gave something of a shaking up as we passed around the curve. I was not thrown out of my chair.” “ It (the train) was going fast. * * * I call it a sharp curve.” It also appears from the testimony of Miss Barnes that they had been disturbed in their seats by the lurching of the car ]n-ior to this. “ There was nothing unusual happened, except we were thrown about considerably while we were at the table, until this very severe lurch came.” In response to' the question as to the lurch or movement of the car as compared' with its movement at other times during the journey, she thought it was the sharpest that they had experienced; it was a heavier and stronger movement, and threw them around more than any other. Evidently, therefore, this particular lurch did not come wholly without warning — a little stronger lurch might reasonably be expected.

It was shown by the defendant’s roadmaster that the highest curve on the road between Mauch Chunk and Allentown, between which the accident occurred, is a curve of seven and one-half degrees, and that is not regarded as a sharp curve The trainmaster says that he would call a fourteen or fifteen degree curve a very sharp one. It was testified that a railroad train may run on a track having a seven and one-half degree curve', with the tracks in good condition, from fifty-five to sixty miles an hour; on a six degree curve, the safe rate of speed is sixty miles; on a five degree curve, sixty to sixty-five miles; on a four degree curve, seventy miles at least, and on a three degree curve, seventy miles or more.

The train conductor testified that the train left Mauch Chunk eleven minutes behind schedule time, that it was running all right, and that he was not informed of the accident. The trainmaster and the train operator testified that the schedule time for leaving Mauch Chunk was six-five, and for arriving at Easton was seven-twenty-five ; that the distance between these places is forty-five miles, and the schedule time is-forty-one miles per hour. The witnesses produced the record showing the' movement of this train, and testified that it left Mauch Chunk at six-seventeen, or twelve minutes late; that it made up three minutes in the run of twenty-eight miles to Allentown, where it arrived at six-fifty-three, and reached Easton [538]*538at seven-twenty-seven, or two minutes late, having made up seven minutes in the last seventeen miles. From this it would appear that the average rate of speed was about forty-six miles per hour, though these witnesses testified that the rate between Mauch Chunk and Allentown was fifty miles per hour. The respondent makes the contention that an average rate of fifty miles an hour means that at some .points the speed was much slower, and. at other points much faster than the average; that in gathering speed at - the outset, and in slowing down at various points, the speed was much less than fifty miles per hour, while to make up the average, the speed at other points must have been fully fifty-five miles an hour — that is, the danger limit was reached; and that upon this state of the evidence the questions, what was the rate of speed and whether that speed was dangerous, could not be taken from the jury. It appears that there are many curves on this road between Mauch Chunk and Easton. That the accident could not have happened at the highest curve, seven and one-half degrees, situated at about six or seven miles east of - Mauch- Chunk, is made apparent, from the' testimony of plaintiff's witnesses. And if the train was running at a high rate of speed, it is evident that these occupants of the car were unable to form a correct opinion as to whether the curve was “ a sharp one,” or “a very sharp” curve.- Their opinion is evidently founded upon the effect produced by the movement of the car. .

The defendant proved that'it had used such chairs- in its dining cars for years, both before and since this occurrence, without accident of any kind; that the same kind of chairs are in use upon' various other railroads; that the equipment of dining cars with unfastened chairs is the more modern method, and is generally regarded as the most satisfactory mode of equipment. Evidence was also given tending to show'that trains have been constantly running at the same or a higher rate of speed than that at which the train was running at the time of the accident, not only on that part of the road, but also on other parts where the grades are heavier and the curves sharper.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 A.D. 535, 50 N.Y.S. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-lehigh-valley-railroad-nyappdiv-1898.