Newcomb v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

69 S.W. 348, 169 Mo. 409, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 28, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 348 (Newcomb v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newcomb v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 69 S.W. 348, 169 Mo. 409, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 285 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

— On August 7, 1897, the plaintiff purchased a'ticket at St. Louis for transportation to New [413]*413York, over the Wabash, Michigan Central, and New York Central railroads. At 6:30 p. m. on Sunday, August 8th, he arrived at Buffalo, New York, over the Michigan Central railroad, where a stop of twenty minutes was provided for supper. Erom Buffalo to New York the plaintiff was to go over the New York Central railroad. The defendant’s depot at Buffalo, into which the Michigan Central train came and out of which the New York Central train was to go, fronts north on the south side of Exchange street. Next to' the street is the ticket office, waiting-room, baggage-room and restaurant. In the rear thereof, to the south, are tracks numbered one to six from, north to south. There is a platform for passengers to use running parallel with the track between the building and track number one, and similar platforms between tracks two and three and four and five. In other words, the tracks are constructed in pairs, with platforms between each pair for passengers to use in reaching the trains on the several tracks» There are three cross-overs or runways across the tracks inside of the station. The first is one hundred feet east of the west end of the station. The second is four hundred and fifty feet east of the west end of the station, and directly opposite the waiting-room. The third is five hundred and fifty feet east of the west end of the station, and is on a prolongation of the exit from the station to Exchange street between the waiting-room and the restaurant. The platforms were elevated about seven or eight inches above the rails. These cross-overs are made to enable passengers to conveniently cross over the tracks and also so that the trainmen can run the baggage trucks across the tracks to the several trains. To reach the cross-overs there are inclines in the platform. ' They are fifteen feet and three inches long and the rise is less than eight inches, so that the incline is about half an inch to the foot." The incline is in the line of the platform, that is, from west to east, the crossways extend from north to south. The whole construe[414]*414tion is what is called by the witnesses “the standard plan,” adopted by the engineers of the New York Central railroad, and in use at all' stations along its line.

The Michigan Central train, upon which the plaintiff arrived in Buffalo, entered the station from the west, upon track number six, the track furthest from the station buildings. Learning that he had twenty minutes for supper, the plaintiff left the sleeper, in which he had been traveling, and without noting the name of the sleeper — although it was upon his sleeping-car ticket — he went across one of the three crossovers, he does not know which, to the restaurant. After eating his supper, he started back across the tracks, by way of one of the three cross-overs, to his sleeper. In doing so he met a friend from St. Louis, Mr. Knox, and they walked along together. Some one stopped Mr. Knox and the plaintiff proceeded alone. He crossed the platform between the restaurant and track number one; he crossed the first pair of tracks, numbered one and two; he crossed the platform between tracks two and three; he crossed the next pair of tracks, numbered three and four, and when he reached the platform between track number four and track number five he turned west and walked along the platform. There was a train standing on track number four (which was the West Shore train) and a train standing on track number five (which was the New York Central train to- which his sleeper had been transferred from the Michigan Central train). It was then 6:45 p. m., the regular schedule leaving time of the West Shore train. The New York Central train was not to leave until 6:50 p. m. While walking west along said platform, with the West Shore train on his right and the New York Central train to his left, the two trains being separated only by the platform, which was about fifteen feet wide’ — he noticed that the train on his right was moving. The porter of the sleeper attached to that train had left the platform and gotten on to the step of the sleeper. The plain[415]*415tiff stepped up to the train and asked the porter of the sleeper if that was the train for New York. The porter replied, “Yes, sir; jump on.” The plaintiff did so. This was at a point about fifty feet east of the west end of the station and .■about fifty feet west of the first or most westerly cross-over. Afer thus getting on the train the plaintiff noticed that it was not the same sleeper in which he had traveled to Buffalo, and so he said to the porter, “Did you say this was the New York train ?” The porter replied, “How do you want to go,” The plaintiff answered “I want to go by the New York Central.” The porter said: “This is the West Shore; get off.”It seems that both the West Shore and New York Central trains run from Buffalo h> New York, but over different routes. But of this the plaintiff was' ignorant. When the porter told the plaintiff to get off, the train was running slowly —from two to six miles an hour according to the various witnesses — -the grade is heavy inside of the station towards the ■east- and, hence, the trains can not run fast upon starting. By. this timé the sleeping-car on which the plaintiff was, had crossed the first and second cross-overs and was within about twenty feet of the third cross-over, which was nearly opposite the restaurant. That is, the train had traveled about five hundred and eighty feet from where the plaintiff boarded it. The plaintiff then got off of the train. He says he did so of his own volition and not because the porter told him to do so or because he was ordered to get off; that “it was a deliberate, voluntary act on his part; he took his time. He looked first on the north side of the train and saw there were tracks •on that side; he then looked on the south side and calculated that was the safer side to jump on. Before jumping he took a glance on one side -and then on the other.” He then describes his manner of getting off and how he was injured as ■follows:

“Q. Did you get down on the bottom step ? A. I do not think I did.

[416]*416“Q. You don’t'tbink you got down on tbe bottom step ? A. No, I am not positive; I went and took bold of that rail.

“Q. Tbat is tbe band-rail that is attached to tbe body of tbe car? A. Yes, sir; tbe band-rail of tbe front cár of those two cars, that inclosed this platform; and I got bold of that and got off the train — jumped off tbe train — and when I got off, of course, simultaneously, I let go of the rail, as one naturally would do.-

“Q. You got bold of tbe band-rail attached to the body of the front sleeper? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Now, you say you do not tbink you got down on tbe bottom step; from what point did you jump? A. Why, I got down on tbe step, but I don’t think I went to- tbe bottom ; I am not positive.

“Well, your best recollection is that it was not tbe bottom step ? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Is your memory^ perfectly clear in regard to letting go of tbe rails as you jumped ? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Did you look to see whether the place you were going to alight on was a reasonably safe one, and clear from obstructions ? A. I took it to be the platform; I presumed it was a straight platform; I didn’t see anything where I was going to jump.

“Q. You bad walked across one of these runways, hadn’t you? A.. Yes, sir.

“Q. Twice? A. Yes, sir.

“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 348, 169 Mo. 409, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcomb-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-mo-1902.