199 A.D. 835 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
The action was brought and recovery had for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff from falling into an areaway on the southerly side of the “ Brownstone Building,” known as" the City Court House, in the City Hall Park in the borough of Manhattan, New York. There are three buildings in the City Hall Park. One is the old City Hall proper, and the others are known as the County Court House and the City Court House, which are located northerly of the City Hall and substantially in a line between Broadway on the west and Center street on the east. Between the two buildings and Chambers street, the City Hall Park is open, consisting of sidewalks and grass plots, and the opening between the two buildings runs northerly and southerly and is about forty-two feet in width. There is in this opening a sidewalk twenty-five feet, nine inches, in width, passing along the easterly edge of the County Court House and extending to the sidewalk on the southerly side of Chambers street, and between the easterly side of the walk and the City Court House there is a grass plot with a low railing separating it from the sidewalk. There are entrances to both court houses from the southerly side,
The plaintiff was employed at No. 38 Chambers street, and at about five-thirty p. m. on the 14th of January, 1919, while en route to take a Brooklyn bridge car, he passed southerly on the walk between the court houses, and was walking about a foot from the coping on the sidewalk where it curved, and on reaching a point about seven feet east of the southwest corner of the City Court House, he was jostled or jolted by another pedestrian going in the same direction, and his left foot hit the coping and he lost his balance and fell into this areaway and sustained injuries for which the recovery was had. He testified that it was raining at the time, but he described it as merely a heavy mist, and said that the walk was no more slippery than would be caused by ordinary dampness;
The janitor of the City Court House testified that an inscription on a stone on the Chambers street side indicated that it was. built in the year 1852; but no evidence was offered and no statute was cited to show by whom or for what purpose the building was constructed or under whose jurisdiction it now is. It appears that it had been used for the City Court for upwards of twenty-six years, and that this areaway and coping remained in the same condition during that time. In behalf of the defendant testimony was given tending to show that during the last twenty-six years there had been no similar accident. The City Court came into being as the successor of the Marine Court by chapter 26 of the Laws of 1883. It must be assumed that the Brownstone Building and its appurtenances, which includes the areaway and the coping as constructed, were duly set apart for the use of the City Court, and it is probable that it has been used for court house purposes a very long time, for it appears by chapter 77 of the Laws of 1831 that buildings on the park were used or about to be used for court house purposes, and that act declared that all the buildings designated by the common council for the use of the courts or public offices within the territory then known as the City Hall Park, should be deemed to be included for all legal purposes in the term “ City-Hall of the City of New York.’ ’ That was substantially re-enacted by section 1073 of the Consolidation Act (Laws of 1882, chap. 410, as amd. by Laws of 1888, chap. 412). Chapter 206 of the Laws of 1853 and chapter 344 of the Laws of 1857 also authorized the use of buildings on the City Hall Park for court houses.
It appears that these sidewalks were extensively used, and that at different times of the day they were quite congested.
The most that can be claimed by the plaintiff from the evidence is that the city provided and maintained this court
In the course of his direct examination the plaintiff was asked by his counsel with respect to the location of the sidewalk and the areaway and whether there was anything “ intervening,” and he answered, “ No, there is nothing intervening; there is the railing on that side.” This evidently referred to a fence erected on the coping after the accident. The court stated to the jury that the fact that such a fence had
The jury were instructed to consider that the areaway was there with the coping on the edge of the depression and the sidewalk next to the coping, and on those facts to determine whether the city, in not foreseeing that a pedestrian was likely to be shoved into the areaway and in not doing something to guard against it, exercised reasonable care; and that if the city was negligent and the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence, he was entitled to recover. Later on the court charged the jury with respect to the defendant’s negligence as follows: “Was it negligent in leaving that place just as it is shown in the photograph, a wide sidewalk coping twelve inches wide running from five and a half inches I think down to nothing? Of course, there remember that you take in the whole situation.”
The attention of the jury was then drawn by the court to the fact that the stairway in front of the building projected out a considerable distance beyond the fine of the coping, which would tend to keep the crowd away from the coping, and that in a measure this was a safeguard particularly at the point opposite the areaway where the coping was the lowest, and that this was to be taken into consideration in determining whether or not the city was negligent. The court then put to the jury the question as to whether the city was negligent “ in leaving that without some better safeguard to keep people from being pushed over.” At the close of the charge in chief and after a request for further instructions had been made by
The case differs very materially from Donnelly v. City of Rochester (166 N. Y. 315), where at the business center of the city of Rochester the authorities had permitted to exist for a number of years an areaway extending six feet and four inches into the principal business street, and twelve feet, three inches below the grade of the sidewalk, guarded only by a railing two and a half feet high erected along the edge of the sidewalk, and the plaintiff’s intestate, while lawfully using the walk, slipped on snow and was precipitated over the railing and into the areaway. An ordinance of the city provided that such openings should be guarded by a substantial rail on the sides thereof at least three and a half feet in height. The court held that the city could not be held liable for failing to enforce its own ordinances, but the fact that
In all probability, the areaway, coping and sidewalk were in substantially the same condition as when originally constructed, which, as the evidence indicates, was probably about 1852. We have then a period of nearly seventy years with no evidence of any prior accident from the condition of the sidewalk, areaway or coping. I am, therefore, of opinion that this case falls within the general rule with respect to unforeseen accidents, and that the evidence is insufficient to warrant a jury in finding that the city was guilty of negligence in not foreseeing that an accident was likely to happen in this manner by a pedestrian in the first instance being jolted by another pedestrian, and in the second instance tripping on the coping, and in the third instance so landing in the areaway as to sustain injuries, and in failing to guard against the same.
Moreover, here, I think, there was no ordinance requiring a railing on the coping or other protection for the areaway. The ordinance claimed to be applicable is section 161 of chapter 23 of the Code of Ordinances of the City of New York, which provides as follows:
“ Areas; special restrictions.— Every existing area that is open at the top shall be inclosed with an iron railing in front, and on the sides where there is an opening used for the purposes of ingress and egress, such a railing to be at least 3 feet high measured from the base and capable of sustaining a lateral weight of 300 pounds at any part thereof, the gates of which, if any, shall be so constructed as to open inwardly.” The phraseology of this ordinance is very broad, but manifestly it must not only be confined to areas in the city, but to those over which the local authorities who enacted the ordinance had jurisdiction. Necessarily it does not apply to areas on private premises; and I am of opinion that it does not apply to areas on public grounds, but relates only to areas as thereinbefore defined and regulated. We find in section 170 of chapter 5 of the Code of Ordinances (being Building Code), relating to projections into the streets beyond the
It follows that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., and Merrell, J., concur; Dowling and Page, JJ., dissent.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appehant to abide event.