130 N.Y.S. 828 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1911
This is an action to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s husband, who lost his life on March 24, 1903, while employed as a float-man on one of the New York Dock Company’s car floats being towned by the tug John L. Brainard. During dense fog, early in the morning, a collision occurred between the car float upon which plaintiff was employed and a car float being towed by the tug Transfer No. 10' owned by the defendant. The original "action was against both the railroad company and the New York Dock Company, in which a judgment dismissing the complaint was reversed (135 App. Div. 876; 137 id. 71; 198 N. Y. 600; 200 id. 598); and the second trial is against only the defendant railroad company.
The testimony indicated that the fog was so dense that those navigating the" defendant’s tug did not see the tug Brainard and its car floats until the floats were but a very short distance apart, when both tugs reversed their engines,
Upon defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict, four points are urged:
First. The complaint alleged that the collision was between the two tugs, instead of stating that the actual impact was between car floats alongside and it is insisted that this' variance is material. Considering that this point was not taken at the close of plaintiff’s case, and that a tug with its tow alongside is usually .treated as a single vessel (The Civilta and The Restless, 103 U. S. 699), also that the evidence as to the collision details had been received in the prior trial without objection, also that the entire flotilla in tow of the Transfer was owned by the above named defendant and operated by its 'servants, there seems no merit in this point, which, if seasonably raised, would have been remedied by an amendment to conform the pleadings to the proofs.
It is urged that this rule had not been proved, and as it had not been offered in evidence upon the trial, the charge to the jury introduced an element of which no evidence had been given. While the regulations of governing boards, local inspectors or pilot authorities are matters of proof, the courts of the State of New York are required to tafee judicial notice and enforce general statutes of Congress without any formal proof (Milliken v. Dotson, 117 App. Div. 527), even if the point be not urged by counsel and is originated by the court. Kessel v. Albetis, 56 Barb. 362. Indeed, it would be error for the jury to be instructed as to the management of the respective boats in a general way, without bringing before them the obligatory force of the statutes regulating the situation at the time. Belden v. Chase, 150 U. S. 674, 703. Upon the trial, counsel for defendant also requested the court to charge in its favor touching another provision of the same statute (Art. 18, rule IX) forbidding the use of certain signals in fog and directing only alarm blasts to be given when vessels are not in sight of one another. This requirement, that steam vessels in fog shall not delay to stop their engines until they are seen, but shall stop upon hearing an unlocated signal forward of the beam, is so imperative that recent decisions have refused to accept excuses and condemned navigators for failure to obey such a reasonable regulation. The El Monte, 114 Fed. Rep. 796; In re Clyde S. S. Co., 134 id. 97; The
Third. The jury were not obliged to accept the evidence of the master of Transfer No. 10 that his vessel was actually stopped when the vessels struck. Apparently, on the former trial, each captain testified that his own boat was backing away from the other and had actual stemway. 135 App. Div. 879. On this trial, the master of the Transfer merely claimed that his boat had stopped. This is the common illusion of an observer upon one of two approaching vessels in fog, that the forward motion is always from the other vessel and that the observer’s boat is stationary. The Herbert Manton, 14 Blatchf. 37, 40; Fed. Cas.. 6399.
Fourth. The verdict of the jury of $10,000 for a man thirty-nine years old, earning about fifteen dollars a week, is claimed to be excessive, as it- carries interest since 1903, bringing it up to nearly $15,000. It has been the plaintiff’s hardship that ¡she has had to w-ait eight years while this case has been in litigation. The authorities in this State do not hold that $10,00O' is excessive in the case of a steady, industrious man, of good habits, of the age of plaintiff’s intestate, leaving a dependent widow with other next of kin. Beecher v. Long Island R. Co., 53 App. Div. 324; Douglass v. Northern Central R. Co., 59 id. 470.
The motion to set aside the verdict is, therefore, denied.
Motion denied.