72 F. 458 | 2d Cir. | 1896
Defendant owned and operated an electric street railroad in the city of Brooklyn, using the so-called “trolley,” or overhead wire, system. Plaintiff was one of a gang of linemen employed by defendant, engaged in putting in cross-overs, switches, etc., and repairing the wires. This work was done at night, with the aid of an extension or tower wagon. Plaintiff, on the night of the accident, a dry, fair night, was stringing a span wire at a part of the line which runs under the track of an elevated railroad, an operation which required him to stand on the movable platform of the tower wagon about 20 feet above the street. While thus engaged, one of the cars of defendant, in charge of a conductor, and operated by a motor-man, came along at a high rate of speed, and
There was evidence that the motive power was cut off and the brake applied while the car was yet from 30 to 60 feet short of the tower wagon. It was running on an up grade, and the conductor testified that with the normal condition of a dry track and any power on, going-up grade at the usual rate, a car could be stopped within 10 feet. The jury were not specifically charged that defendant would not be liable if the accident happened solely by reason of the carelessness of the motorman, but no request was made so to instruct them. Moreover, when the plaintiff first rested his case, defendant moved for a direction in its favor on the ground that the proof showed that the accident happened through the negligence of a fellow servant. The court thereupon held that there was not sufficient evidence to send the case to the jury, and was about to direct a verdict for defendant, when, upon plaintiff’s request, he allowed the case to be reopened for further proof as to some defect in the car. Under these circumstances it must be assumed that the jury understood that they were to pass only upon the question which the court finally sent to them. The car in question had no sand box. None of the cars of this line had. The sand box is an appliance whereby, when required, sand is deposited on the track in front of the wheels, whereby the track is roughened, and the progress of the car retarded. The motorman is thus enabled to have more complete control of his car than he would if the sand were not there. Defendant, in certain seasons of the year, — not in summer, — sends out a special car, in which are men with shovels, who throw sand into hoppers through which it falls upon thé track. Defendant contended that this was a more approved method of sanding the track than by the use of a sand box on each passenger car. Sand is, of course,, more necessary when the weather is frosty or foggy, and there is sometimes a dropping of oil and water and steam from an elevated railroad track, which would have a tendency to wet the track beneath, or to make it slippery. As this accident happened on September 13th, it is a fair inference that the sand car was not at the time in use. The cohrt charged the jury: That the only question was whether the car had proper appliances on it for stopping it. That “the defendant was not bound to provide the very best appliances known for the purpose, but the defendant is bound to provide what is reasonable in view of what can be provided for such use; that is, appliances such as reasonable and prudent men would provide.” That “if this car was a reasonable and proper car, reasonably fitted, such as a- reasonable and prudent man would put upon the tracks and line, and, having in view all the dangers and all the circumstances, it is for you to -say whether it had reasonable appliances for stopping it, — if this car had such appliances, it is enough, and the verdict should be for the defendant. It is for you to say, looking at all the testimony, and what the witnesses have said about what is usual and proper as to tiie necessity for such things, looking
The only oilier exception which need be considered is to the allowance of a question to plaintiff’s witness Bullock. lie was an electrician, familiar with the “mechanism and machinery” of electrical cars. He was asked, “Can an electrical motor car be safely operated without a sand box, through the streets of the city of Brooklyn?” to which he answered, “No, sir; not through a city.” The question was duly objected to as incompetent, and exception to its allowance was reserved. The question was an improper one. It was for the jury, upon the whole evidence, to answer the question whether or not it was safe to operate an electric motor car without a sand box, in the .streets of Brooklyn. As an expert, the witness was competent to testify as to the relative efficiency of the stopping devices when operated with or without sand; to state, if he could, within what time or within what space a car with a sand box and a car without a sand box could be stopped. To do even this, moreover, lie would probably require more data than the question supplied him with. The condition of the track, the grade, the speed of the car, its weight, and consequent momentum, are undoubtedly essential elements of the problem. It is not the sand box itself which helps to stop the car, but the saud which comes out of the box, and it would produce the .same effect however it got on the track. But, although the witness was thus invited and allowed to give his opinion as to how the jury should decide the case, we do not see that it has operated to the
(March 2, 1896.)
Upon a petition for rehearing the following memorandum was made:
PER CURIAM. There was no “inadvertent confusion” in the mind of the court as to the phrase “sand box” and “sand car,” nor was there any “misapprehension” of the witness Frick’s statement “a sand box is never used in the summer time, but in the winter time.” The court found abundant support for the statement of fact challenged by the petition in the particular circumstances attending the accident and in the further statements of this same witness: “In the place of putting sánd boxes in cars,” “we run a particular car over our road at certain times;” “to sand the track;” “we do not keep sand on the track all the time;” “in certain seasons it is not necessary to run sand cars out at all;” “this accident did not happen in the time of year when it needed sand.” The other points presented on this motion are sufficiently discussed in the original opinion. Motion for reargument denied.