Citation Numbers: 132 A.D. 703, 117 N.Y.S. 532, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1580
Judges: Ingraham
Filed Date: 6/11/1909
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The action was brought to recover for injuries sustained bj’ the plaintiff in breaking through a door leading to the defendant’s, passenger station.of its railroad at Rector and Greenwich streets, in the city of Hew York. It seems that the defendant maintained ¡a passenger station at Rector and Greenwich streets, together with the stairways, passages and approaches thereto, for the purpose of furnishing and facilitating ingress and egress óf passengers to and from the defendant’s trains; that on the 23d of March, 19.08, the plaintiff, intending to become a passenger on one of the defendant’s trains, duly paid his. fare and, having deposited his ticket in the box provided by the defendant for that purpose, passed through one of the said passages and attempted to push open a swinging door maintained by the defendant for the purpose of closing the approach when not in use, when a glass panel in the door gave way, injuring the plaintiff.
Upon the trial the plaintiff was called as a witness and testified that.on the evening of March 23, 1908, he started to take one of the defendant’s trains upon the Hinth avenue elevated railroad, and that at about half-past six o’clock, after dropping his ticket in the box, in trying to open the door going out to the platform, he put his hand through the glass in the door. The plaintiff described the situation as follows : After going west from Wall street up to Broadway you go down the whole of Rector street, which leads you on a level with the first.door ; that he had to go up the steps to the first floor of the United .States Express building to reach' the ticket office and purchase a ticket; that he then had to drop the ticket in
It is manifest that there is no ^evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. The plaintiff approached a locked door made partly of glass. He placed his hand upon the door to open it and the glass broke. There is no evidence that the door was not properly constructed or was not of sufficient strength to resist the ordinary pressure to open the door when unlocked ; and the fact that it was not sufficiently strong to resist the plaintiff pushing against it when locked did not justify the court in determining that the defendant was negligent.
The plaintiff seeks to sustain this action upon the application of the maxim res ipsa loquitur, but it is impossible to see how that has any application. This was not an apparatus used in the transportation of passengers, but an ordinary swinging door in a passageway connecting a building with a station of the defendant’s, railroad.
I think this'judgment was, therefore, clearly without evidence to sustain it, and it is reversed and a new- trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
McLaughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred; Laughlin and Houghton, JJ., dissented.
Determination • and judgment reversed and new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.