160 N.E. 400 | NY | 1928
The defendant delivered coal at the home of the plaintiff in the city of Ithaca. The defendant's coal truck stopped on the left-hand side of the curb. The driver of the truck with his helper carried the coal in bags to a coal bin in the rear of the house. The plaintiff's son, a boy about four years of age, followed the men back and forth as they carried the bags of coal. When the coal had been delivered the driver started the truck. In some manner the plaintiff's son was thrown under the wheels of the truck and killed. There is evidence that the boy was standing at the curb, and was caught by a hook which was hanging from the truck from a chain upon the side nearest the curb. The plaintiff has recovered a judgment for the damages caused by the child's death.
In spite of denial by the defendant's witnesses that the accident occurred in the manner claimed by the plaintiff, the jury might have found that the defendant's driver was negligent in permitting a chain and hook to hang from the truck in a position in which it might injure others using the street. Perhaps the jury might have found that the driver was negligent in starting the truck without noting where the boy was standing. The complaint predicates liability also upon the defendant's negligence in stopping the truck with its left side to the curb in violation of the provisions of subdivision 6, section 15 of the General Highway Traffic Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 70). The trial judge charged the jury that it might bring in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff if it found that the driver violated the provisions of the Highway Traffic Law or similar provisions of the ordinances of the city of Ithaca and that such violation caused the accident. *368
Statutes and ordinances which require vehicles to proceed along the right-hand side of the roadway and prohibit vehicles from stopping with their left sides towards the curb of the roadway tend to facilitate the safe passage of persons or vehicles using the roadway. Such statutes and ordinances are intended to create order where disorder might be dangerous. The law prescribes safeguards to protect those who might come within the zone where danger is apprehended. Disregard of the statutory safeguards is a breach of duty, at least towards those for whose protection the safeguards have been prescribed. Liability properly follows where a breach of duty results in injury. (Martin v. Herzog,
Here the infant plaintiff stood on the curb. He might be injured by a vehicle passing or stopping at the right-hand side of the roadway, as well as at the left-hand side. The chain and hook happened to be hanging from the left-hand side of the truck. The driver used an entrance to the truck on its right-hand side. If at the moment of the accident the chain had hung from the side of the truck away from the curb, this particular accident would not have occurred; but nothing in the record shows that the position of the chain on that side was in any way connected with the rule of law that vehicles must proceed and stop with their right-hand sides towards the curb. The death of plaintiff's intestate may have been due to negligence on the part of the defendant in failing to observe that the chain was in a position where it might strike a person on the curb, but the rule as to the manner in which vehicles must proceed and stop created no safeguard against such a danger, and disobedience of that rule was not the cause of the plaintiff's intestate's death. *369 If that was due to any negligence on the part of the defendant it was negligence which had no connection with the duty imposed by statute or ordinance.
The judgments should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., CRANE, ANDREWS, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur; POUND, J., not sitting.
Judgments reversed.