Lehr v. Steinway & Hunters Point Railroad
Lehr v. Steinway & Hunters Point Railroad
Opinion of the Court
In 1886 the defendant owned and operated with horses a street railroad, extending from the ferry at Hunter’s Point, eastwardly through Long Island City. Between three and four o’clock in the afternoon of Sunday, July 18, 1886, the plaintiff, accompanied by his wife and by a girl about seven years old, and her father, stood waiting at the ferry (the western end of defendant’s line) to take a car for Bowery Bay Beach, a pleasure resort on the line of the road. More per
The defendant moved for a non-suit on the grounds that the plaintiff had failed to establish that defendant negligently caused the accident, and that he had not affirmatively shown that he did not negligently contribute to the accident. The .motion was denied and the defendant excepted. The court ruled that there was no evidence that the road or car was defective, or that the defendant negligently employed an unskillful or incompetent conductor or driver; but instructed the jury that if they found that the defendant negligently permitted the car to be overloaded, and that the overloading caused the accident, the plaintiff could recover unless the accident was caused in part by some negligent act ef his which was a contributing cause of the accident. The exposure of a passenger to a danger which the exercise of reasonable foresight would have anticipated and due care avoided, is negligence on a part of a carrier. It clearly appears that the defendant undertook to carry more passengers than could sit and stand within the car, and that both platforms and their steps were filled to their utmost capacity. The action of persons so crowded together, and the great force which they exercise, sometimes almost unconsciously on each other, is understood by carriers of passengers and their employees, and the court would not have been justified in non-suiting the plaintiff and holding, as a matter of law, that the exercise of reasonable foresight would, not nave led the defendant to anticipate that overcrowding this car and its platforms might render accidents Eke the one which befel the plaintiff probable. Whether the defendant was negligent in carrying so many passengers was a question of fact for the jury.
The evidence in respect to the speed of the car, and the circumstances under which the plaintiff attempted to enter on the front platform, would not have justified the court in ruling, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff contributed to his own injury by making the attempt, but properly, left it, as a question of fact, for the jury.
Whether the plaintiff was crowded from his position by persons entering on the opposite side of the front platform for the purpose of being carried, or by some movement of those whose fares had been collected, does not very clearly appear. It is not asserted that any person willfully or intentionally crowded the plaintiff from his position, and Putnam v. Broadway and Seventh Avenue Railroad Company (55 N. Y. 108), and kindred cases, are not in point. The- defendant made no attempt to show that persons entered on the car against the wish or protest of the conductor or driver, or that the rules of the defendant required that the car should not be overloaded, or that the conductor or driver made any attempt to prevent the car from being unduly crowded.
Whether the defendant negligently caused the injury to the plaintiff, and whether he negligently contributed to his own injury were, under the evidence, questions of fact for the jury; and finding no error in the submission of the case, the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except Brown J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John H. Lehr v. The Steinway and Hunters Point Railroad Company
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published