
    Hanrahan v. Manhattan Ry. Co.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    
    July 9, 1889.)
    Contributory Negligence.
    Plaintiff, while attempting to board defendant’s train, struck her foot against the side of the car platform, which was some inches higher than the station platform, causing her serious injury. She testified that the space was covered by the dress of- a lady passenger, who was entering the car just ahead of her, so that she did not see it. She was a frequent passenger on the road, and always used the station where the injury occurred. She did not look to see where she placed her foot. A space of from two to six inches or more between the car and station platform is essential in operating a road, and it was shown to be impossible to have the platform on exactly the same level, owing to the difference in the car-springs. Similar accidents had occurred on defendant’s road at other stations. At one station a movable platform was used, but it was not adapted to.the station in question. Held, that plaintiff did not use ordinary care, and a verdict for her should be set aside.
    On exceptions from circuit court, Hew York county.
    Action for damages for personal injuries, by Bose H. Hanrahan against the Manhattan Bailway Company. Verdict for plaintiff for $2,000, and defendant appeals.
    Argued before Van Brunt, P. J., and Daniels and Barrett, JJ.
    
      Dads & Rapallo and Samuel Blythe Rogers, for appellant. Charles Strauss, for respondent.
   Van Brunt, P. J.

The defendant is a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Hew York, and is engaged in the carriage of passengers upon its elevated railways in the city of Hew York. On the 25th day of August, 1886, the plaintiff, having duly paid her fare as a passenger, attempted to board one of the trains of the defendant going down towards its station at the intersection of Fifty-Third street and Eighth avenue. According to the plaintiff’s evidence, there were a few passengers in front of her; the nearest being a woman, who was about a foot ahead, going towards the same car platform. As they reached tile edge of the platform, the woman’s dress covered the open space which necessarily exists between the car platform and the station platform. The plaintiff, as she was about stepping onto the car platform, stubbed her toe against the side of the car platform, which was some inches higher than the'stat’ion platform, and her leg fell into the space between the car platform and the station platform, and was severely injured. The plaintiff had been a frequent passenger upon the defendant’s cars, and had always used this station. The conductor of the train and the gateman of the station are both positive that the plaintiff was the only passenger who attempted to board the train at this point, thus contradicting th'e plaintiff’s statement that the space between' the car and platform was covered by a preceding woman’s dress. Upon the trial the contention upon the part of the defendant was that there was no evidence that it had not exercised ordinary care in the construction of its cars and station platform, and that there was proof that the plaintiff had not used reasonable care in boarding the cars, as she knew that there was a space between the car and platform, and she knew that the car platform was higher than the station platform, and did not look where she was stepping, but looked straight ahead while she was boarding the car. The proof shows without dispute that there must be some space between the cars and the platform, and that because of difference of load and stiffness and newness of springs some cars will be higher than others over the level of the platform. It is conceded by the respondent that the defendant was not bound to use the highest diligence in this respect, but that it was only bound to use ordinary care. This is the rule laid down in the case of Lafflin v. Railroad Co., 106 N. Y. 136, 12 N. E. Rep. 599. The court say: “It [the defendant] was not bound so to construct this platform as to make accidents to passengers using the same impossible, or to use the highest degree of diligence to make it safe, convenient, and useful. It was bound s.mply to exercise ordinary care, in view of the dangers attending its use, to make it reasonably adequate for the purposes to which it is devoted.”

The evidence in this case shows that there must be some space between the platform and the cars; that the road cannot be operated without it; and that a space of three and one-half to four inches would not be unreasonable, which, in practice, would vary from two and one-half to six inches, or more. To meet this evidence there was proof offered to show that accidents had happened at other stations from persons slipping in between the cars and the platform, and i,t was argued that therefore the construction of the platform, or the operation of the road, was shown to be negligent, and also that at the South Ferry station a movable platform was used, which shoved out when the train was at rest. Upon the part of the defendant it was shown that there was only one station at which sucli an appliance was used, and that it was there used because the cars stood upon a curve, and were thrown from the platform; and that this station being a terminal one, the cars could be stopped at one spot, which could not be done at every station without great loss of time. The evidence as to the happening of similar accidents was clearly admissible, and it was not necessary to show all the particulars attending the happening of the accidents. The fact that such accidents did happen was sufficient to call the attention of the defendant to the fact that there was danger in the maintenance of such appliances; that their passengers were in danger during its use; and consequently the defendant could not claim exemption because there had been nothing to call its attention to the dangers whicji its passengers ran. If, however, notwithstanding the fact of this notice by the happening of accidents, the structure was of such a character that its passengers were safe if they used reasonable care in boarding the cars of the defendant, then the mere happening of these accidents was no proof of negligence. The passenger is just us much bound to use reasonable care in boarding a car as the defendant is bound to use reasonable care in the construction and maintenance of the platforms of the cars and stations; and if the passenger does not use such reasonable care in boarding a car, clearly no recovery can be had. It is clear that the plaintiff had no reason to expect to And a solid space between the car and the station. She had been going up and down that road for years, and must have known that an open space existed; and she knew that she would have to cross that space, and yet she stepped forward to put her foot upon the platform of the car while the whole space was, as she says, covered by a previous passenger’s dress, and she therefore could not see whether she was putting her foot upon the platform or in the open space between; and in fact this circumstance is offered as an excuse for the plaintiff not seeing, although there is no evidence that she looked, where she should put her foot, in consequence of which she stumbled. The proximate cause of the accident would thus seem to be the long dress of the passenger, which covered the space alleged to be dangerous, which the plaintiff knew to be there, and which she knew she must step over to board the train in safety, and which she did not do because it was covered by the long dress of the preceding passenger. If a person walking along a sidewalk, which he ordinarily has the right to assume is fit for traveling, but in which, in this instance, he knows that there is a hole into which if he falls he will break his leg, and he walks right on, and attempts to step over it, without looking whether he is putting his foot over the hole or into it, and he puts his foot into it, he cannot be said to use ordinary care, or any care at all. This seems to have been the degree of care used by the plaintiff. She knew this space existed between the car and the platform of the station. She also knew that she must step over tiiis space, and upon tile car platform, and yet it does not appear that she looked when she was stepping, or took any precautions whatever to avoid the evident results of stepping between the car and the station.

In the case of Palmer v. Pennsylvania Co., 111 N. Y. 488, 18 N. E. Rep. 859, the plaintiff had been injured by slipping upon the ice upon the platform of the car. The court held that he was guilty of contributory negligence, because, knowing that the platform was slippery, the plaintiff walked fearlessly over it, without availing himself of handrails within his reach on both sides of the platform; and the court lay down the rule that the same duty which rested upon the defendant in that case to see and remove this obstruction rested upon the plaintiff with still greater force to guard himself from injury while passing over it. Applying this rule to the case at bar, the imperative duty seems to have been cast upon the plaintiff to look where she was stepping, as she knew that there was a space to be cleared, and, if she failed to do so, that she ran the risk of injury. But she went straightahead, without looking, or, if she did look, could not see because a preceding passenger had along dress. The case of Dubois v. City of Kingston, 102 N. Y. 219, 6 N. E. Rep. 273, illustrates this principle, where the plaintiff was held to be guilty of negligence in stumbling upon a stepping-stone upon the sidewalk, because, being well acquainted with the locality, had he been careful in exercising his faculties, he could have avoided the accident. We cannot see how upon this state of the facts the plaintiff can be said to have shown that she used ordinary care in boarding the car, as it distinctly appears that in so.doing she used, if we may use the expression, ordinary negligence. The exceptions should be sustained, and the verdict set aside, and a new trial ordered, with costs to defendant, to abide the final event. All concur.  