52 N.Y.S. 11 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff in this action, accepting the invitation of one Joseph Huber, rode with him on the night of December 11, 1895, from the residence of Dr. Richards on Linden boulevard, Brooklyn, to the scene of the accident which gives rise to this controversy, on her way to the Broadway ferry. The vehicle used was a single-seated side-bar buggy, with a top. She sat on the left-hand side,' and Mr. Huber, who appears to have been a competent driver, sober and in every way qualified, sat on the right-hand side of the buggy and drove the horse. They drove up Linden avenue. The plaintiff knew that there was a railroad on Rogers avenue which they were to cross, and when near that avenue she says she saw a car a long block off. The horse was going slowly at the time, and the evidence shows that she said to the driver of the horse “Ride slow.” On the redirect examination she testified that “ I told him to slow up when we were approaching the car track, because I knew we were approaching a car track. 1 said to him, ‘ Mr. Huber, ride slow.’ ” It appears that while driving slowly the vehicle was struck by the car of the defendant, and the plaintiff was thrown out and more or less seriously injured.
This is clearly reversible error. The plaintiff, in an action for damages due to negligence, cannot he held responsible for the negligence of third parties. It is true, of course, that there are cases in which the neglect of third parties has been allowed to defeat an action of this character, but it was only under such circumstances that the negligent act became in fact the negligence of the plaintiff, and it does not change the rule of law. The negligence of the driver, in so far as he was independent of the control of the plaintiff, was separate and distinct from the negligence of the plaintiff, and the mere fact that she was on her guard, and uttered words of caution to the driver, did not constitute such direction and control of his actions as would, in the contemplation of the law, charge her with responsibility for his negligence, but was calculated, rather, to show that she was exercising that degree of caution and prudence which the law makes her duty in approaching a dangerous railroad
In the case at bar the plaintiff did look and saw the approaching car; she spoke to her companion, using the words “ Ride slow.” These words were not words of command, directing that the driver should drive slowly upon the track where a car was rapidly approaching, but were words of caution. She had no control over the driver; he owed her no duty of obedience, and she was not called upon to take the reins, nor is it probable that the driver would have submitted to any such inference with his own horse. The law contemplates that a person, to be chargeable with the conduct of another, must have the power or authority to control; and such power or authority cannot be assumed in the case of a woman who accepts an invitation to ride with a gentleman in his own vehicle, where he assumes to act as driver and to control the horse. As was said in the case of Robinson v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (66 N. Y. 11): “ The plaintiff had no control of the vehicle, nor of the driver in its management. It is not claimed but that Conlon was an able-bodied, competent person to manage the establishment, nor that he was intoxicated, or in any way unfit to have charge of it. Upon what principle is it that his negligence is imputable to the plaintiff ? It is conceded that if by his negligence he had injured a third person, she would not be liable. She was not responsible for his acts, and had no right and no power to control them. * * "x" I am unable to find any legal principle upon which to impute to the plaintiff the negligence of the driver. The whole argument on behalf of the appellants on this point is contained in the following paragraph from the brief of its counsel: ‘ So if the plaintiff had proceeded on this journey upon the invitation of Conlon for the like purpose, she having voluntarily intrusted her safety to his care and prudence, and thus exposed herself to the risk of injury arising from his negligence or want of skill, she should be precluded from recovering, if he thereby
“ Between one who has no voice or control in the management of an enterprise, and no right to share in any control,” say the court in the case of Kessler v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (3 App Div. 426), “ and those, who are actually conducting the enterprise, it is plain that no relation of principal and agent exists or can exist. The sole ground of imputed liability, whether of contributory negligence or of inf mes done others by negligence, is that the party has some right, voice or control in. the conduct of the enterprise. We can see no distinction in principle between one riding in a vehicle upon the invitation and as the guest of one person or of a dozen. If he is a guest the question of liability is the same in either case. The plaintiff was, therefore, responsible only for his own negligence.”
To the same effect is the opinion of the court in the case of Strauss v. Newburgh Electric R. Co. (6 App. Div. 264). Pauline Moses and her two daughters accepted an invitation from William Pfeiffer to ride in his carriage. Pfeiffer drove his horse upon Bridge street, when he was informed by the deceased that a car was approaching ; he drove-along the street, clear from the tracks, but his horse became uneasy and finally stopped and began backing toward the track. Pfeiffer used his whip and tried to persuade his horse to move forward, but without avail, and the car of the defendant struck the vehicle in which the deceased was sitting with such force as to completely demolish it, with the result that the deceased sustained injuries resulting in her death. The court, in passing upon the case, say : “ So far as the question-of contributory negligence was concerned, if plaintiff’s intestate was chargeable with the
The same doctrine is held in the case of Dyer v. Erie Railway Co. (71 N. Y. 228); in Phillips v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (127 id. 657), and in Masterson v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (84 id. 247). In the latter case, at page 253, the court say, “ and I feel bound to say that the facts do not show a condition of things that Avould warrant the jury in saying that the plaintiff cannot recover, even if they should find Atfield was negligent; they Avere not engaged in any joint employment; and whatever doubts may have existed as to wdiat the law Avas years ago, it seems now to be settled that, in a case of this character, assuming that Atfield was a competent driver and sober man, and no reason which deceased could dis
In the recent case of Meenagh v. Buckmaster (26 App. Div. 451) the court had under consideration the charge of the trial court, that, “ if Kernahan was intoxicated, or his manner of driving was so heedless or careless as that Meenagh, in the exercise of ordinary-care, would have perceived it, and he failed to do so and remonstrate with Kernahan, he was chargeable with contributory negligence for continuing to ride with him, because if it occurred to Meenagh’s mind that the driving was dangerous and careless and he assented to it then he was a party to it. As to the plaintiff’s own negligence, a passenger has no right, because some one else is driving, to omit some reasonable, and prudent effort to see for himself the danger, if there was a danger, and to avoid it.” Commenting on this charge the court say: “ We think this charge is correct as applied to the facts of this case. We must assume that, in the exercise of reasonable care and prudence, the plaintiff could have observed the obstruction. Under such circumstances, he ought not to remain passive; the situation required upon his part some affirmative act, either of remonstrance to the driver or by way of attracting his attention to the obstruction ; he could not remain inert and shelter himself under the claim 'that he had no control of the horse or the driver.” There is no suggestion here that the plaintiff is liable for the neglect of the driver, but that Lhe plaintiff wras himself negligent in riding with a man who was obviously reckless in his driving without making any effort to prevent such reckless driving, or to call the driver’s attention to the danger by which he was confronted. In fact, there are no cases which impute to the guest liability for the negligence of the driver; and it is only where the passenger, riding at the invitation of another, has neglected some duty with which he was charged, in exercising that reasonable care which the law demands at all times, that the courts have refused him relief when he has sustained injury through the negligence of others. (See, also, Hobson v. N. Y. Condensed Milk Co., 25 App. Div. 111, and cases cited.)
The judgment and order are reversed and a new trial is granted, costs to abide the result.
All concurred, except Hatch, J., absent.
Judgment and order reversed" and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.