
    Emma F. M. Ayres, Resp'ts, v. Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, App'lt.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Fourth Department,
    Filed April, 1896.)
    1. Carriers— Negligence.
    Where the plaintiff is free from negligence in falling over a mail bag on a station platform, the carrier is liable for injury, in case the platform, on the occasion of the accident, was insufficiently lighted, and in case the carrier knew, or ought to have known, that the postal clerk was accustomed to throw mail bags on the platform at such station.
    3. Same.
    The evidence, in this case, was held to be sufficient to authorize the jury to find that the plaintiff did not contribute to the accident by any negligence in attempting to enter the car.
    Appeal from an order entered on a verdict in favor of plaintiff, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial made on the minutes.
    William Kernan, for app’lt; William Townsend, for resp’t.
   FOLLETT, J.

This action was begun November 12, 1891, to recover damages for a personal injury caused, it is alleged, by the negligence of the defendant. October 24, 1891, the plaintiff purchased of defendant a ticket at North Brookfield for Utica, for the purpose of taking passage on train No. 3, due at North Brookfield at 5:33 p. m. On this date the train arrived at North Brookfield at nine minutes past six and left at ten minutes past six, it being thirtyisix minutes late. This train carried the United States mail, and had for twelve or thirteen years. The mail was in charge of a postal clerk, who, on the occasion in question, threw a mail bag from the mail car to the station platform about the time that the train came to a stop. The bag fell upon the platform about thirty feet south of the waiting-room door and between it and the passenger car. The plaintiff, in going from the waiting room to the passenger car, fell over the bag, and was injured. She was assisted to the oar, and rode to Utica, there took a New York Central train to Albany, at which place she took the Delaware & Hudson train for Saratoga, her home, arriving there at about three o’clock on the morning of October 25th. It is asserted that the accident caused severe and permanent injuries, from which the plaintiff has not recovered. October 24th the sun set at 5:05, and the accident occurred one hour and five minutes after sunset. It is alleged that the defendant was negligent (1) in permitting the mail bag to be thrown upon the platform between the waiting room and the passenger car, and (2) in not lighting the platform so as to enable passengers to see and avoid obstructions.

There is no dispute in the evidence that the mail bag was thrown upon the platform, and lay between the door of the waiting room and the passenger car. There was no gas or electricity at this station, and the only means of lighting it was by lamps. There was a lamp, with a reflector, affixed to the exterior wall of the station, for the purpose of lighting the platform, which, at the time of the accident, was not burning. Two or three hanging lamps in the waiting room, one of which hung in a bay window, and a hand lamp in the ticket office, were lighted, and the lamps in the cars were burning. It is contended by the defendant that the light from these lamps, shining through the doors and windows of the depot opening upon the platform, with the lamps in the train, sufficiently lighted the platform to have enabled the plaintiff, by the exercise of due diligence, to have avoided the mail bag, and escaped injury. On the other hand, the plaintiff gave evidence that the platform was not sufficiently lighted to have enabled her, by the exercise of diligence, to have avoided the mail bag which lay in her path. On the trial much evidence was given on each side of this issue, and so much and of such a character that it became a question of fact for the jury, and its finding on this issue cannot be disturbed. When this action was first before this court, 60 St. Rep. 13, it was held, following Carpenter v. Railroad Co., 97 N. Y. 494; Muster v. Railroad Co., 61 Wis. 325, and Snow v. Railroad Co., 136 Mass. 552, that the defendant was liable for the injury, the plaintiff being free from negligence, in case the platform, on the occasion of the accident, was sufficiently lighted, and in case the defendant knew, or ought to have known, that the postal clerk was accustomed to throw mail bags on the platform at this station. The rule there laid down must be regarded by this court as the law of this case. On this trial the plaintiff called three witnesses who testified to the practice of the postal clerk. One swore that he had seen, mail bags thrown onto the platform from this train by the postal clerk more than 100 times within two years preceding the accident. Another witness testified:

“Prior to the 24th of October, 1891, the mail clerks generally throwed the mail bag right off on the platform south of the depot. It usually struck right close by the cars as they passed along. They used to sometimes kick it out with their foot. It would strike anywhere from ten to thirty feet south of the depot. That custom had continued ever since I kept the hotel,—since 1884,— from 1884 to 1892.”

This witness kept a hotel from 1884 tO' 1892 near this station, from which he could see the station and platform. Another witness testified that, within two years prior to the accident, he had seen mail bags lying on the platform about the time this train passed, on fifteen or twenty occasions. TJpon this issue the defendant called the agent at this station, who testified that sometimes the mail bag was kicked out of the mail car north of the bay window as the train passed, but that he did not remember ever having seen it thrown off south of the waiting-room door before the night of the accident. The conductor of the train testified that he never know of mail bags being thrown off south of the waiting room. A trainman who had been employed on the train for two years testified that he had never known of mail bags being thrown off south of the Availing room, and the person who carried the mail between the post office and the train testified that he had never seen mail bags thrown off south of the waiting room before the accident. That it had long been the custom for the postal clerk to throw bags from the car to some place on the platform is testified to by all of the witnesses. The only point of difference among them was as to the particular place on the platform where bags had usually been deposited. The point where the bags were thrown off was undoubtedly dependent upon the place where the train stopped. This evidence is quite sufficient to sustain the finding that the defendant knew or ought to have known of the practice of the postal clerk. The evidence was sufficient to authorize the jury to find that the plaintiff did not contribute to the accident by any negligence of her own in attempting to enter the car.

It is urged that the damages awarded are excessive. This case has been three .times tried. On the first trial, in January, 1892, the jury disagreed; on the second trial, in March, 1893, a verdict for $19,000 was rendered; and on the present trial, in May, 1895, a verdict was rendered for $9,083. The testimony in respect to the extent of the plaintiff’s injuries, and whether they are likely to be permanent, is voluminous. Physicians testified on both sides. The plaintiff has submitted to a physical examination by the defendant’s surgeons. The medical features in the case were gone over on the first and second trials, and every opportunity has-been had to develop the extent and character of the injuries complained of, and though the sum awarded seems large, yet we cannot say that it is so large as to-justify this court, under the circumstances, in setting aside the verdict on the ground that it is excessive.

The court, while instructing the jury, said:

“But, gentlemen, if she took cold going to Albany as the result of the injury which she received, and that was the necessary consequence of such injury, then the defendant is liable for that condition of things.”

To this the defendant excepted. Upon a careful examination of the case we fail to find any evidence that her illness was caused, in whole or in part, by talcing cold on the journey from North Brookfield to Saratoga. Indeed, we find no evidence that would justify the conclusion that she took cold on that trip. The plaintiff testified that, immediately after entering the car at North Brookfield she had a severe chill, and felt cold, and while at Albany she had a second chill. The night of the accident was chilly. The foregoing is the only evidence from which it was sought to have the jury infer that the plaintiff’s illness was caused by talcing cold. It is conceded that the plaintiff was injured, and the evidence is ample to justify the conclusion that the injuries were sufficient to produce the chills and subsequent symptoms. There being a known and efficient cause for the chills, subsequent fever, and rise in temuerature, the court was not required to instruct the jury that they might attribute these conditions to a cause not shown to have existed, which, if it existed, might ha produced many or all of the symptoms. The instruction excepted to was quite as favorable to the defendant on this branch of the case as it was entitled to.

The exceptions taken to the admission and exclusion of evidence are unimportant and require no discussion. The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.

Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.

All concur.  