35 N.Y.S. 540 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
There is substantially no conflict in the evidence of the circumstances under which the plaintiff’s injury was occasioned. He was in the highway, going north, and as he came to the track of the Rome, Watertown & Ogdensburg Railroad, a single-track road, which crossed the highway at right angles, he saw a freight train approaching from the east, and waited for it to pass; and when what he supposed was the rear car had passed, he stepped onto the track, and was struck by a detached car, which was following at a short distance in the rear of those connected with the engine. This car had been detached while the cars were in motion, so that by its momentum it might pass into a switch on the north side of the track, and 110-?,- feet west from the center of the highway. The speed of the train at the time the car was detached by pulling out the pin connecting it with the car ahead of it was variously estimated as at the rate of from 4 to 15 miles per hour, and the distance between the detached car and the rear one connected with the engine, as represented by the evidence, was from 10 to 60 feet. The alleged negligence of the defendant is in the fact that the running switch was made across the highway. This crossing is near the depot of the station known as Millers. It is not a populous village, and therefore the method of moving a detached car across this-highway into the switch may not necessarily be negligence per se, as it has been held to be in making a running switch at the intersection of a railroad and a public street in such a village. Brown v. Railroad Co., 32 N. Y. 597. The defendant gave evidence to prove that the manner it was done at the time in question was not what is termed a “running” or “flying” switch, because the train was stopped some distance east of the highway for the purpose of having the movement of the detached car slower than it otherwise would be at the crossing, and (as the defendant’s witness terms it) thus “dropping” it into the switch. But the question of the negligence of the defendant was properly submitted to the jury. There was no one at the crossing, nor signal in any manner given, to warn persons in the highway that a car detached from the train was following it. The brakeman upon the car was upon the rear end of it, and so situated that he did not see the plaintiff as he proceeded to gó upon the track. These circumstances permitted the imputation of want of due care on the part of the defendant. It would more palpably have been negligence if the occurrence had been in the nighttime. Railroad Co. v. Converse, 139 U. S. 469, 11 Sup. Ct. 569. But it was at midday, and the plaintiff would have seen the approaching car if he had looked to the east. He did not do so. This fact gives much force to the charge of his contributory negligence, and must defeat his recovery, unless the circumstances were
A physician and surgeon, called as a witness for the plaintiff, having testified that he attended the plaintiff, dressed his wounds, etc., shortly after the injury in October, 1893, made an examination of him in April following, and had recently, in September, 1894, examined him, proceeded to state the plaintiff’s condition, and gave evidence tending to prove that the impaired physical condition and deformity of some of the members of bis body were attributable to the injury in question. The defendant’s counsel took exception to the reception of this evidence as speculative. The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was 17 years of age, in vigorous health, and
The verdict for $8,000 was quite large, but, in view of the evidence relating to the injury and its consequences, it cannot be said to be so large as to justify the conclusion that the jury were influenced by prejudice or passion in reaching the result. The view taken is that the verdict is supported by the evidence, and that there was no error in the rulings at the trial.
The judgment and order should be affirmed. All concur.