
    Henrietta F. Andrews, Respondent, v. Metropolitan Street Railway Company, Appellant.
    
      Conflict of evidence in a negligence case—the testimony of a woman in a highly nerv» ous condition considered not suflicient to sustain, as against the testimony of other witnesses, a verdict in her favor.
    
    Where, on the trial of an action to recover damages for personal injuries sus» . tained by the plaintiff while alighting from one of the defendant’s street cars, the plaintiff’s testimony that the car had stopped at the time she attempted to alight is contradicted by all the other witnesses who were upon the car, the fact that a physician who treated the plaintiff since the accident testified that,
    . as a result of the accident, she was in a highly nervous condition, had delu» sions and a very pronounced case of neurasthenia, is to be considered in deter» mining whether the plaintiff’s uncorroborated testimony that the car had stopped when she attempted to alight is sufficient to support a finding of a jury to that effect.
    Laughlin, J., dissented.
    Appeal by the defendant, the Metropolitan Street Railway Com» pany, from ■ a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York-on the 6th day of March, .1903, upon the verdict of a jury for $5,000, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 13th day of March, 1903, denying the defendant’s motion for a ne w-trial made upon the minutes.
    
      Charles F. Brown, for the appellant.
    
      W. M. K. Olcott, for the respondent.
   Ingraham, J. :

The plaintiff was injured by falling as she alighted from one of the defendant’s cars. The accident happened on the 2d. of November, 1899, between four and five o’clock in the afternoon, just after the car turned from Forty-second street into Vanderbilt avenue, which adjoins the depot of the New York Central railroad. The plaintiff testified — and her testimony was entirely uncorroborated — that after the car turned from Forty-second street into Vanderbilt avenue she heard the conductor ring the bell and call out “ Harlem Depot; ” that the car then stopped near the depot; that she got up to get out; that the door' was open and she stepped out on the platform ; looked at the motorman and he recognized her; he looked at her ; that she stepped down, put her foot on the pavement, and the car was immediately started up with a sudden jerk which threw her headlong down at the time that the jerk came ; that her right- foot was on the pavement, and she was given a sudden jerk. Upon cross-examination she said that she had not given the conductor any signal to stop; that she said nothing to the motorman as she passed out on the platform and that he said nothing to her; that there was a man' standing right by her on the platform and the motorman stood at his brake; that she put one foot slowly down upon the step, putting the right foot down upon the ground, the left foot remaining upon the step, and then the car started.

To sustain this action the plaintiff must prove that in some way she had indicated to the employees of the defendant that'she wished to alight, or that they had acquired information of that intention. There is no evidence that the car had stopped at the usual place in front of the depot where passengers alight, and the evidence of the defendant is quite conclusive that where the plaintiff fell was some distance south of Forty-third street, which is not the usual place for cars to stop for passengers who wish to enter the depot. She gave no indication to the conductor that she wished to alight; said nothing to the motorman who-was on the platform attending to his duties; when she walked out on the front platform of the car; but she says the motorman turned around and looked at her after she came out on the platform. Her whole right to recover, therefore, depends upon the fact that the- car had actually stopped and that the motorman saw her under circumstances which required him to appreciate that she wished to alight, and that knowing that fact, he started up the car before she had ah opportunity to carry out her intention.

For the defendant, the motorman, who between the time of the accident and the time of the trial had left the employ of the defendant, testified that the depot of the Harlem railroad was on the east side of Vanderbilt avenue, between Forty-second and Forty-third streets; that he had charge of the car in question'; that the plaintiff on the 2d of November, 1899, came out of the front door of the car and started to step off the car; that he told her to hold on a minute; that he was then stopping the car; that she stepped off before it stopped and fell down; that the car was in motion when she left it; that the plaintiff did not say anything to him when she came out on the platform; that when he stopped the car he turned and looked and then saw her going into the depot; that the plaintiff was the first passenger to get off, and a number of passengers got off immediately after her; that the first he saw of the plaintiff while he was braking up the car was when she started to step off; that he then said, “wait a minute, hold on,” but she stepped off the car; that after he turned into Forty-second street he commenced to brake the car because the cars always stop just south of Forty-third street, that is the rule of the company, and he was stopping intending to have the car stop where the fender would be on the south crossing of Forty-third street, but that when he saw the plaintiff step off he stopped the car as quick as he could so that it stopped about forty feet south of Forty-third street; that when she came out of the car he did not think she was going to stép off the car.

The conductor of the car testified that he had charge of this car at the time of the accident; that from the time the car turned into Vanderbilt avenue until it stopped at Forty-third street he was on the rear platform; that he received no request or signal from the plaintiff that she desired to alight; that the car stopped about forty feet below the south side of Forty-third street; that as soon as the car stopped he gave the motorman two bells to go ahead because the car had not got to the usual stopping point; that the car did not go ahead and he then heard somebody call to him that a woman had tallen from the car, and he then got off the car, but the plaintiff had disappeared; that the car came to but one stop after it left Forty-second street and before it reached Forty-third street.

Two passengers upon this car were called as witnesses. One testified that he was standing up in the car near the front door as the ear turned out of Forty-second street and Vanderbilt avenue, about two feet from the front door; that as the car reached a point opposite the Harlem station he saw the plaintiff open the door and walk out on the platform of the car and then step off the car where she fell down on the pavement, but the car was in motion when she got off, moving very slow; that he recognized the conductor who had testified as the conductor of the car at the time of the accident; that he did not hear the motorman say anything to the plaintiff. Another passenger testified that he was standing up in the front part of the car; that he saw the plaintiff as she got up and went out of the front door; that when the front door of the car was opened the plaintiff walked out upon the platform and stepped off the car; that the car was in motion when she stepped off; it was moving 'slowly; that when she stepped off the car was forty to fifty feet south of Forty-third street; that he did not hear the motorman say anything and did not see the motorman turn his head to the right, or look at the plaintiff; that it was all done very quickly in a couple of seconds; that, she did not wait after she started to walk* out on the platform, but just stepped' right off.

That the plaintiff stepped out upon the platform when she got Opposite the Harlem depot, that she thought the car had stopped and stepped off, is quite evident. All of the other witnesses who were upon the car and testified said positively that the car had not stopped and that the plaintiff stepped off whén' the car was in motion.

The plaintiff’s physician, who has treated her since the accident, testified that she was in a highly nervous condition; that she has delusions and has a pronounced case of neurasthenia, which was the result of this accident. The condition of the plaintiff, with impaired nerves, as described by her physician and her friends, is to be considered in determining whether her unsupported statement that the car had stopped when she stepped off, contradicted, as it is, by every person who was on the Car and called as a witness, is sufficient to base a recovery upon against the defendant. ■ That she thought the' car had stopped and that she stated to the jury what she believed maybe conceded; but assuming that she told what she believed, it is much more probable that she is mistaken upon the question as to whether , this car was slowly moving when she attempted to alight, than that the four witnesses called by the defendant, two of whom certainly have no possible reason to testify falsely, were mistaken. I think that the finding of the jury that this car had come to a stop before the plaintiff left it and went out upon the platform, and that it started up again as she was leaving the car, or that the motorman had any reason to suppose that she was going to step off the car before it stopped, is not .supported by the evidence, and for that reason I think there must be a new trial.

■ It follows that the judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.

Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Laughlin, J., dissented.

Judgment and order reversed, new trial Ordered, costs to appellant to abide the event.  