Most likely, the rifle is over-gassed. Reducing the amount of gas being used will remedy the situation.
There are 2 types of gas systems using pistons: the type which takes a constant amount of gas from the round being fired and VENTING excess gas before the piston hits the Bolt Carrier (as in the FN-FAL) and the system in which the amount of gas getting TO the piston is regulated before it gets there. This latter is the type of gas system used on the SVT-40.
What is happening is this: the first round is fired by the Hammer striking the Firing Pin on the Bolt, completely as usual. The round fires, the bullet passes down the bore, passing the Gas Port. At the Gas Port, TOO MUCH gas is directed to the Piston. The Piston moves backward, hitting HARD against the Bolt Carrier, which then moves rearward very fast, lifting the Bolt from its seat in the Receiver. The Bolt and Carrier then travel rearward in the Receiver. When Bolt and Carrier reach the rear end of the trough-shaped Receiver, they are going MUCH TOO FAST. The Bolt Carrier compresses slightly, the Receiver stretches slightly, then all that stored energy releases itself at the beginning of the counterrecoil stroke, actually BOUNCING the Carrier and Bolt forward at a very high velocity. This sounds crazy until you understand that Steel has a HIGHER modulus of elasticity than RUBBER!
The Receiver returns to its correct shape, throwing the Bolt Carrier with the Bolt forward at a rate far beyoind what the rifle was designed for, the Carrier itself undoes its own compression..... and the action returns to battery position MUCH faster than it should. The Bolt strips the next round from the Magazine, chambers it.... and the Firing Pin drifts forward to set off the Primer and fire the Cartridge EVEN THOUGH THE HAMMER IS BEING HELD IN 'COCKED' POSITION.
This is a serious overgassing of the action.
The next stage -- at which you have not yet arrived and possibly will not -- is that which results in the destruction of the rifle. The Globco 555, made FROM an SVT, featured a shortened gas system which drew gas from the Gas Port at MUCH higher pressures. This rifle has been known to operate at SO MUCH overgassing that rifles have fired entire magazines of rounds WITH THE BOLT LOCKED ONLY ON THE FIRST ROUND.
You do not want this to happen!
Get a Tokarev gas-adjustment tool and adjust the gas so that the empties come out of the rifle and land as CLOSE TO THE BENCH AS POSSIBLE.
The rifle is now in a SAFE condition and, for an added bonus, it will now shoot at its most-accurate level AND with the minimum-possible recoil.
Good luck!