59 N.Y.S. 308 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The action is brought to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff who stepped into a. coal hole in front of a building owned by the defendant and received serious injuries. The allegations of the complaint were, substantially, that the defendant was the owner of certain premises on the corner of Lexington avenue and. Eighty-fourth street in the city of New York ; that he had maintained in the cellar of the premises a place for the reception and storage of coal, and that said place was under or adjacent to the sidewalk, on Lexington avenue ; that'the defendant had kept two certain openings or excavations in the sidewalk on Lexington avenue, which were used by him or his servants for the purpose of receiving coal on the premises, and that said openings were provided with covers made of iron, which were used by the defendant in closing and covering the openings in the sidewalk. The plaintiff claims that on the 5th of February, 1897, in the forenoon, while she was walking upon the sidewalk on Lexington avenue in front of the defendant’s premises, she stepped Upon the cover of one of these openings,
There are certain exceptions taken to the ruling of the court as
The defendant gave testimony tending to show that- at the time when this accident occurred persons were engaged in putting coal into the building through this opening, upon a contract which he had made with them for that purpose. It was objected by the plaintiff that all such evidence was incompetent and immaterial because the defendant could not free himself from his duty to protect the hole in the sidewalk by delegating that work to any other person. This was undoubtedly true, and the evidence was not competent for the purpose for which it was offered. But it was competent for the defendant to show the situation of affairs at the-time the plaintiff stepped into the coal hole, and to that end he was entitled to give-evidence to the effect that persons were engaged at that time in putting coal into the coal hole, by way of showing the condition of the hole and the surroundings, because these things bore upon..the. question of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. The evidence, therefore, was competent for that purpose, and, although it went further than was strictly competent, it is clear that, no injury was done to the plaintiff because the jury were told by the court that if the injury happened through the negligence of the owner, or of any person employed by him, in leaving the sidewalk unguarded and unprotected, he was liable-for the injury, and that the evidence which was given- on behalf of the plaintiff, to the effect that the coal hole was covered by an iron disk; that the plaintiff, in passing, stepped upon the disk; and that she was precipitated into the hole, was sufficient to show that the hole was not properly and sufficiently guarded and protected, and that, if that was the fact, the defendant was liable for the plaintiff’s injury. . The court, further charged that if the plaintiff was precipitated into the hole, without fault or negligence on her .part, the defendant was liable for
The court charged the jury that the plaintiff was bound, in making out her case, to show that she acted as a reasonable and prudent woman would in walking along the sidewalk, and that if the jury found that by the use of ordinary care, as she was walking along the sidewalk, she should have observed the condition of the sidewalk, or the condition of the coal hole or the cover, or that it was dangerous for her to do as she did, or if she observed them and did not take the care which a reasonably prudent woman would take, she was guilty of contributory negligence in stepping or walking upon the coal-hole cover. To so much of the charge as told the jury that “ plaintiff was bound to take notice of what was before her on the street,” the plaintiff excepted. The court amended the charge by saying that the plaintiff. was bound to take such notice as a reasonable and prudent woman would have done of what was before her on the street. To the charge thus amended there was no possible objection.
The plaintiff also excepted to that portion of the charge of the court to the effect that there was no question of nuisance in the case, and requested the court to charge that an opening in the sidewalk in front of premises in the city of New York for the purpose of receiving coal was a nuisance, and that the owner of the premises was chargeable with any injury occasioned by his wrongful act in maintaining such a nuisance. This the court refused, and we think properly. The defendant was sued only for his negligence. There had been no suggestion in the case, up to that time, that the opening in the sidewalk was improperly maintained or that it was a nuisance. This one had been there over four and a half years, and from that fact the jury might have inferred that it was constructed lawfully. (Babbage v. Powers, 130 N. Y. 281.) Such openings are common and permits are given for the making and maintenance of them;
For these reasons there was no error upon the trial, and the order must be affirmed.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett and Ingraham, JJ., concurred; Patterson, J., concurred in result.
Order affirmed, with costs.