Nugent v. Brooklyn Union Elevated Railroad

64 A.D. 351, 72 N.Y.S. 67
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 A.D. 351 (Nugent v. Brooklyn Union Elevated 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
Nugent v. Brooklyn Union Elevated Railroad, 64 A.D. 351, 72 N.Y.S. 67 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Hirschberg, J. :

The verdict upon which the judgment appealed from was entered was rendered upon the second trial of the case. On the first trial the plaintiff also recovered a verdict, but that verdict appears to have been set aside by the trial court upon the ground that the plaintiff, in his evidence given upon that trial, frankly admitted his knowledge of, and familiarity with, the condition of the structure where he fell, and the absence of any rail or guard. On this -trial he denied such knowledge or familiarity, but as such denial was necessarily accompanied by the assertion that he took no notice wdiatever of the structure, and as the danger was quite apparent and obvious had he seen fit to look, it is quite impossible to uphold the second verdict on any known principle of law.

[352]*352At the time of the accident the plaintiff was in charge as conductor of a work train' made up of flat cars on the defendant’s elevated road in Brooklyn, at the intersection of Broadway and Myrtle avenué. The train was used for picking up old ties along the road. The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was about to switch his train in order to permit a passenger train to pass, and had alighted from a car and was proceeding to the switch along a narrow platform provided for that purpose, when he fell from the platform into the street and was very seriously injured. The accident occurred at five minutes before three o’clock in the afternoon of December 5, ÍS98.

The road was then in the hands of a receiver, to whose liability, if any, the defendant has succeeded. The allegation of negligence in the complaint is to the effect that at the point referred to “ there was a narrow platform, at a high elevation above the level of the-street, which said platform the employees' of the said receiver, including this plaintiff, were compelled and required to use in the prosecution of their work, for the purpose of. walking over the same along the line of the railroad when engaged in the work, of switching trains and other, work. That the said receiver carelessly and negligently failed to provide a guard rail or any other protection for the safety and security of such employees as were compelled and required to use the said platform, as aforesaid, ;and that the said receiver carelessly and negligently maintained, permitted and allowed the said platform on. the said date to remain in said unsafe and perilous condition.”

This allegation of negligence is undoubtedly insufficient as the basis of an action. No statute requires the construction of guard rails or other protection on the platforms furnished for the use of railway employees; there is no allegation that the structure was riot open and visible; there is no claim of any defect in the material of which it is composed or the manner in which it was put together; theré is no statement that the plaintiff did riot know the risk attendant upon walking along a high and narrow platform, or could not have discovered the risk by intelligent inspection ; and such risk on the face of the complaint was assumed by the plaintiff as incident to his employment.

■The complaint, however, alleges the happening of the accident as [353]*353follows: “ That on or about the said 5th day of December,. 1898, plaintiff was set to work by the said receiver and put in charge "of a work train upon the said road as the conductor of the said train ; that his work upon the said train consisted in directing the movements and management of the said train as it moved along the said elevated road ; that the plaintiff, in the prosecution of his said work on the said date, was compelled and required to go upon the said platform for the purpose of switching or side-tracking the said train at the said point; that while walking along the said narrow and unguarded platform, in a careful and cautious manner, he stepped upon certain ice or snow, or upon some slippery substance which had been by the said receiver carelessly and.negligently allowed tc> gather and remain upon said platform, and that said platform being unguarded and unprotected by any guard rail, or in any other manner, he was precipitated over the edge of the same,” etc.

Assuming that the allegation to the effect that the receiver had permitted the platform to become and remain slippery is a sufficient charge of negligence, it does not aid the plaintiff, for the case is wholly barren of proof to support it. All the evidence with the exception of that of the plaintiff himself, is to the effect that the platform was not slip perry, but that it was dry and free from snow and ice. The plaintiff testified that as he was walking along he slipped and fell. He did not know what caused him to slip. He said: “ I walked along the platform and I stepped on something and slipped.” Manifestly this is .wholly unsufficient as proof of negligence in the maintenance of a slippery structure. Not only is there no evidence of the nature of the something ” or as to who placed it there, but no suggestion that it was on the platform such a length of time before the accident as to charge the receiver with constructive notice of its existence.

The case was submitted to the jury upon the theory that they might lawfully find the defendant negligent in furnishing a platform high in the air, only two and a half feet wide, and without a railing. They were further permitted to find that the plaintiff did not and could not know the condition of the platform in .the exercise of such care as was incumbent upon him. The court refused to charge the jury at defendant’s request that if plaintiff’s [354]*354slipping was the proximate cause of the accident there could be'no recovery; and also refused to charge at defendant’s request that if the slipping was a mere accident for which no one was responsible the verdict should be for the defendant.. The verdict is, therefore, based on two propositions: First, that the jury could find that in furnishing the structure in question the defendant did not furnish the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place on which to work, and, second, ■that they could also find from the proof that the plaintiff’s opportunities to discover the danger were not sufficient to charge him with notice of the character of the structure; or, in other words, that the risk was one which he did not assume. Neither proposition is sound.

The plaintiff had been in the employ of the defendant at the time of the accident ten years. The platform was similar in. every respect to those constructed on other portions of the road, excepting at stations or yards where ' the whole surface of the structure was boarded over, and there was no proof that such platform had ever during the ten years proven insufficient or dangerous. The plaintiff’s original employment was as lamp man; that is, he was engaged, to clean the lamps in the cars, and his duties were performed at the yard at Manhattan Junction. In July, 1898> he was made brakeman on the jDassenger trains, and for a few weeks immediately proceeding the accident acted as conductor from time to time on the work trains. It cannot be doubted that he had abundant opportunities during his ten years of' service to observe the general construction of the platforms along the road. Indeed, he admitted on. the first trial, as has been said, that he had seen the platforms before the accident, and knew that they weré of the same character as the one from which he fell. He testified on that trial as follows : “ Q. You used to be brakeinan on trains occasionally that run over this road, did you not? A. On the Broadway line? Q. Yes? A.. Yes, sir. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A.D. 351, 72 N.Y.S. 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nugent-v-brooklyn-union-elevated-railroad-nyappdiv-1901.