73 N.Y.S. 74 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
Lead Opinion
This is an action for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in • falling upon a sidewalk on one of the public streets of the city of Hew York, which, it is alleged, was in a dangerous and unsafe condition owing to ice and snow negligently allowed to accumulate and remain thereon by defendant. The accident occurred between the hours of eleven and twelve o’clock in the forenoon on the 20th day
The grounds upon which we are asked to grant a new trial are (1) that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence and the complaint should have been dismissed, and (2) that the verdict is against the weight of evidence.
The material evidence relating to the point of the accident, the con. dition of the walk, the care exercised by plaintiff, and the weather, is in substance as follows : The plaintiff testified that the weather had been cold for two weeks, and that there had been rain, and that he fell at the corner; that he had in his hands a prayer book and a “ talith,” and was walking right in the middle of the walk and did not see any ice until after he slipped and fell; that he then saw ice under the snow; that the whole corner was full of ice and snow about three or four inches thick, but he could not say exactly whether it was smooth or rough or lumpy; that if he had seen the ice he would have gone around it; that he fell about the second step he took on the ice and snow, and sustained a fracture of the thigh bone near the hip joint; that it last snowed the day before and the walk was clear everywhere except at that place; that there was only new snow on the walk and ice, but that in the street there was both old and new snow. An observer from the United States Weather Bureau, called by plaintiff, testifies that the records show that there was no snow until Monday, the fifteenth of December,
The defendant called as witnesses four police officers, two of whom had the beat embracing this sidewalk at the time in question, and all of whom gave evidence tending to show that there was no snow or ice upon the walk; that it was merely damp or wet from people walking on it after passing through the slush at the crossing, but that it was not frozen and that no snow or ice had been permitted to accumulate there, and the evidence of some of them tended to show that the accident occurred on Stanton street about fifteen feet from the crosswalk and that there was considerable snow in the street at the time. The janitor of the grocery building testified that he promptly cleaned the walk when the snow storm ceased and that there was no ice on the walk and only a little snow carried there by pedestrians. The gentleman in charge of the meteorological observatory at Central Park was called as a witness for the city and supplied some evidence relating to the matter concerning which the government observer was not interrogated. This witness said that the only rain in the month of December prior to the accident was on December ninth, when twenty-six one-liundredths of an inch of rain fell, and on December eleventh, when only three one-hundredths of an inch fell.
At the close of the plaintiff’s case and at the close of all the evidence, defendant’s counsel moved for a dismissal of the complaint upon the ground that plaintiff had not proved freedom from contributory negligence and that he had not established a cause of
The learned trial judge submitted the case to the jury in a clear and fair charge to which no exception was taken. A careful consideration of all the evidence which we briefly summarize leads to the conclusion that the verdict was clearly against the weight of evidence. The records of the weather bureau, supported and sustained by the probabilities of the case and the preponderance of the evidence, indicate that the walk had not been left in a dangerous or unsafe condition for public travel. The preponderance of the evidence impeaches the testimony of some of the plaintifE’s witnesses who, after this long lapse of time, undertook to state that there had been ice upon the walk for upwards of a week prior to the accident. Ho explanation is found in the evidence as to how ice could have formed on the walk for such a length of time prior to the 20th day of .December, 1896, and the verdict cannot,. therefore, be permitted to stand.
But beyond this we are also of the opinion that the exceptions to the refusal of the court to nonsuit and to direct a verdict for the defendant which appellant’s counsel states in his points that he relies upon but does not argue, were well taken. If there was ice upon the walk as the result of the sleet which immediately preceded the snow storm of Monday and Tuesday, there was no evidence that the same had been softened by a thaw for a sufficient length of time prior to the accident to charge the city with negligence in not causing its removal. Since the thermometer did not go above the freezing point on Tuesday it is manifest that no ice could have formed from the melting of snow on that day. At some time on Wednesday the thermometer went two degrees above the freezing point but how long it remained there and whether a sufficient length of time to cause a thaw does not appear nor is there any evidence of a thaw on that day. On the eighteenth the thermometer went twelve degrees above the freezing point at some time, but there is no evidence as to whether it was in the morning, or afternoon or evening, nor is there any other evidence of a thaw on that day. The thermometer went only two degrees above the freezing point on the nineteenth, and there is no other evidence of a thaw on that day. It is manifest, therefore, that if any ice was formed as the
(Taylor v. City of Yonkers, 105 N. Y. 202; Harrington v. City of Buffalo, 121 id. 147.) If this was a patch of ice caused by the upsetting of the barrel of pickles as indicated by some of the evidence, it was not so manifestly dangerous to public travel as to give the city constructive notice and impose upon it the duty of causing its removal prior to the accident. It is claimed that the city had actual notice through its police officers, but if so the evidence does not show that the condition of the weather was such that the ice could and should have been removed by the exercise of reasonable care. An attempt was made without success to show that there were footprints in the ice, which would indicate a thaw. It is claimed that the city is liable for the negligence of the street cleaner in upsetting the barrel of pickles, but the evidence is altogether too meagre as to the facts and circumstances under which it was upset to warrant a finding of negligence in that regard, and it may well be doubted as to whether the formation of ice a foot or many inches in thickness and dangerous to public travel would be the natural or necessary consequence of the tipping over of a barrel of brine or vinegar, or other water upon a sidewalk so as to render the city liable, even if it were conceded that it would be otherwise liable for such act of the street cleaner.
If there had been a small patch of ice upon the walk for two weeks, as testified to by some of the witnesses, there being nothing in the evidence to explain what caused its formation, and with only this slight evidence as to the nature or extent thereof, we think the
It follows that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Patterson, J., dissented.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the reversal of this judgment, upon the ground that the evidence does not justify a finding that the defendant was negligent. The obligation of a municipal corporation to remove gnow and ice from' the sidewalks is one that has been much discussed, but I think it is now settled that the existence of ice or snow upon the sidewalks in cities in this locality is not of itself evidence of negligence. It is only necessary to call attention to two or three late cases in the Court of Appeals. Thus, Judge Finch, in Taylor v. City of Yonkers (105 N. Y. 206), says: “ When the streets have been wholly or partially cleaned it often happens that a fall of rain or the melting of adjoining snow is suddenly followed by severe cold, which covers everything with a film or layer of ice and makes the walks slippery and dangerous. This frozen surface it is practi eally impossible to remove until a thaw comes which remedies the evil. The municipality is not negligent for awaiting that result. It may and should require householders, when the danger is great, to sprinkle upon the surface ashes, or sand or the like, as a measure of prudence and precaution, but it is not responsible for their omission. It is no more bound to put upon the ice, which it cannot reasonably remove, such foreign material than to cover it with boards. The emergency is one which is common to every street in the village or city, and which the corporation is powerless to combat. Usually it lasts but a few days, and the corporate authorities may await without negligence a change of temperature which will remove the danger.” In Kaveny v. City of Troy (108 N. Y. 571, 575), Judge Finch says: “ Something more than the presence of ice due to the results of a low winter temperature must be shown to make the city chargeable with negligence. The-fact that for more than ten days preceding the accident to plaintiff the mercury had been below the
The situation shown to have existed in this case brings it, I think, within the principles here stated. It was the middle of a severe winter. Several days prior to the accident there had been alternate freezing and thawing, and ice had been formed upon this sidewalk. The accident happened on the twentieth of December. The first snow that fell that season, as appeared by the official of the United States Weather Bureau, was on Monday, December fifteenth, and upon that day and the following about seven and three-tenths inches of snow fell. On the seventeenth the thermometer was between thirty-six and twenty-two degrees. On the eighteenth it was between forty-four and twenty-eight degrees; on the nineteenth between thirty-four and twenty-three degrees ; and on the twentieth, the day of the accident, between thirty-two and twenty-four degrees. The sidewalk was level and properly constructed, but was rendered slippery by this ice or snow. It seems to me quite evident that this condition was one that it was impossible for the city to remedy. All the ice and snow from all the sidewalks in RTew York could not be removed, and to require the city to perform such a duty would
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.-