137 N.Y.S. 241 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
At the time of the accident the deceased was between nine and ten years of age. . On the afternoon of May 27,1910, with one or more playmates, he was playing ball in Washington street in the village of Peekskill, about twenty or twenty-five feet north of the north crossing of Hudson avenue, which avenue crosses Washington street at right angles. The defendant’s automobile approached from the north at a speed of from fifteen to eighteen miles an hour. There was no other travel in the street, and the children were seen by the occupants of the automobile before the Hudson avenue crossing was reached; The deceased started on a fast run to cross the street in a diagonal direction from the east to the west side. As the automobile approached the boy its course was changed diagonally toward the west, so that it and the boy came together at or near the curb on the west side of the street. The defendant contends that there is no evidence of negligence on the part of the chauffeur; that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, and that the verdict is excessive. These are the questions argued. It is urged that there is no evidence that the automobile ran over the deceased; that the evidence establishes that the deceased fell and received the injuries causing his death as the result of the fall alone, and that the automobile did not even coiné in contact with him. This contention overlooks the evidence of the witness Mead, who was aneye-Witness of the accident, who testifies that he saw the automobile