14 N.Y.S. 463 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
Lead Opinion
This action was commenced and tried in the county court, and the appeal is from a judgment entered upon a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial on the minutes of the court. The action is for the recovery of damages resulting from injuries sustained by the plaintiff by a fall, and the material facts are these: North Malcolm street is a public street in the village of Sing Sing, running north and south, as we assume. At the place of the accident were sidewalks on both sides of the street, seven or eight feet wide, with a brick pavement about about five feet wide in the center, in good order and condition. The side walk was about three feet higher than the road-bed, and there was more or less slope on the edge, but the angle of descent was left quite indefinite by the testimony. The edge was composed of soft rock, and was somewhat ragged. The plaintiff was walking on the sidewalk on the east side of the street in the evening, when it was quite dark, and she started to cross the street to the
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring.) The defendant is a municipal corporation, having such charge of its streets as highway commissioners have in towns. The proof shows that the village, to make an easier grade, dug down the part of a highway which is traveled by vehicles, and left some six feet high the sidewalk along the same. The descent was nearly perpendicular, and there were dangerous projecting sharp pieces of rock upon the inclosure from the sidewalk to the street. The plaintiff on a very dark night in December, 1889, was passing along this sidewalk. The paved part was bad under foot, and she attempted to cross to the other side of the street.- In doing so she was thrown from the sidewalk to the street. She was 58 years of age, and heavy, and was injured severely. The defendant is liable, if the jury find that the road was unsafe. In the case of Saulsbury v. Village of Ithaca, 94 N. Y. 27, the court of appeals held the village liable to a person who was cast down from a sidewalk which was built above the street, and unguarded on either side by reason of a lack of railing. The plaintiff had a right to cross the street at any point. Brusso v. City of Buffalo, 90 N. Y. 679. The plaintiff was not, as matter of law, guilty of negligence which contributed to the injury. She knew there was some descent, but was ignorant of its extent. She was very careful. The .boundary between the traveled part of the road and the sidewalk was not visible. Jewhurst v. City of Syracuse, 108 N. Y. 303, 15 N. E. Rep. 409. The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Pratt, J., concurs.