218 A.D. 600 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
Lead Opinion
This is an action to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by plaintiff as the result of carelessness in the operation of defendant’s automobile. The plaintiff was walking with two other persons along the side of Parkstone road, an unpaved, dirt road, fifteen or sixteen feet wide. While they were proceeding in a southerly direction on the right of the roadway they saw an automobile approaching around a curve about thirty-five feet away. Though then on the right-hand side, as it proceeded around the curve, it swung over toward defendant’s left, toward the side along which the plaintiff was walking. While being so operated, the front left-hand wheel struck a pile of stones, one of which, it is said, was thrown into the air six feet, hitting the plaintiff on the leg and causing the injury for which he recovered this judgment. The pile was made up of eight or nine stones and was about two feet wide and six to ten inches high. A stone produced in court as the one which hit plaintiff was shown to be a foot long and three or four inches thick and to weigh fourteen pounds.
There is testimony that the car was going “ fast; ” and the witness Schwartz, describing the accident, said: “We were walking along and as we got to this road, about fifteen feet, we saw a machine come around this curve. It was coming around rather fast. It came around on the right and made a short turn cutting over toward the left. It came down; in front of us there was a pile of rocks. It hit the rocks, one of the stones flying off and hitting Mr. Burkes in his leg.” He also said he saw the stone “ fly up ” and hit the plaintiff. The defendant rested on the plaintiff’^ case.
Considering the unusual manner in which the accident is asserted to have happened, as well as the very indefinite testimony as to speed, and the absence of any testimony upon which to base a finding of negligence, we believe this record to be insufficient to support the verdict and that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., and Finch, J., concur; Merrell and Burr, JJ., dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
The action was brought to recover for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, as he claims, as the result of negligence and want of care of the defendant in driving his automobile along a road known as Parkstone road near the village of Parksville, Sullivan county, N. Y. The accident occurred on July 8, 1923. The plaintiff was a summer guest at a hotel or boarding house located on said Parkstone road. At that season of the year numerous boarding houses and hotels in the Catskill mountains in the vicinity where the accident occurred were filled with guests, and there appears to have been considerable travel upon the roads in that vicinity. The accident occurred about twenty-five feet southerly on said Parkstone road from the main street of the village of Parksville. Plaintiff, at about eleven o’clock in the forenoon of the day in question, in company with a Mrs. Schwartz and her son, Jacob Schwartz, had come up Main street and had started to walk along the westerly side of Parkstone road toward their hotel. Parkstone road at this point was about fifteen feet across and is described as a country dirt road with no grass plots at the sides of the road. The plaintiff testified that on the
Mrs. Schwartz, the mother of Jacob Schwartz, and one of plaintiff’s companions, was not called as a witness for the plaintiff, her absence being accounted for by the fact that she was ill at the time of the trial. Her son, Jacob Schwartz, testified in plaintiff’s behalf, and substantially corroborated the plaintiff as to how the accident occurred. Schwartz testified that when they were about fifteen feet upon the Parkstone road he saw the car of the defendant, coming “ rather fast,” or as he said on cross-examination, “ going rather very fast,” from the south and around the turn and down the hill at that point toward Main street; that when he first saw the defendant’s automobile it was on the easterly or right-hand side of the road as the automobile was traveling, and that as it approached the witness and his companions the car cut across toward the west side and struck the pile of stones, which Schwartz described as being about five feet from the stone wall at the west side of the road. Schwartz testified that he saw the left front wheel of the defendant’s car, as it came at a rapid rate of speed, strike the pile of stones and saw it pick up and throw the top stone of the pile through the air, striking the leg of the plaintiff. Schwartz testified that he himself picked up the stone, and it was produced at the trial, the testimony being that it weighed fourteen pounds. Schwartz also testified that when the wheel of the automobile, which was a heavy, five-passenger Buick car, struck the pile of stones, several stones were thrown through the air. The stone which hit the plaintiff did not fly at right angles toward the latter, but came diagonally toward the point where the plaintiff was walking, four or five feet northerly from the fine of the stone pile.
The defendant argues that the accident was a most unusual one, and that it was a physical impossibility for the stone to be thrown as described. The answer to this is the fact that the automobile did strike the stone and did hurl it through the air, striking the plaintiff as described by himself and Schwartz. The evidence in plaintiff’s behalf was undisputed, the defendant not testifying and offering no evidence controverting the testimony of the plaintiff and the witness Jacob Schwartz as to how the accident occurred, the defendant resting at the close of the plaintiff’s case. It, therefore, must be assumed that the testimony in behalf of the plaintiff was true. It seems to me there is nothing so very unusual in regard to the throwing of this stone. Dependent on the rapid speed of the car, such an occurrence might readily happen. The stone was described as a flat one and to have been the top stone of the pile “ a good ten inches ” in height. If the car was traveling at a very rapid rate of speed, as it must have been, it is not at all unlikely that it struck this pile of stones in a manner to have thrown this unwieldy, flat stone a distance of four or five feet, striking the plaintiff, or the stone may have projected from the top of the pile so the rim of the wheel of the defendant’s automobile picked it up and threw it as described by the plaintiff and his witness Schwartz. Any one who has ridden on stony country roads knows that it is not an unusual thing for an automobile wheel to pick up a stone and hurl it with great force, sometimes to the side of the road, and sometimes striking the mudguard of the automobile. In any event, this stone was thrown as described by the plaintiff’s witnesses. There can be no doubt as to that, and there can be no doubt as to its weighing fourteen pounds. It seems to me that the physical possibility of such an accident happening rests entirely in the speed at which the car was traveling and the manner in which the stone was picked up or struck from the top of the pile, and that the very occurrence itself clearly proves that the automobile was being driven at an excessive rate of speed.
The defendant insists that under well-known doctrine the accident was so unusual and not to be foreseen by the defendant, that the defendant, in the exercise of due care, cannot be said to have been negligent. I do not think there is much to such contention.
I think the verdict was amply justified, and that the judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Burr, J., concurs.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.