82 A.D. 563 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
These are two actions tried together; the former is: brought by Kate Clancy for personal injuries she received on account of the falling of trolley wires,-and the second is instituted by her husband for damages for loss of her services while she was suffering from the injuries sustained at that time. The defendant was operating a street railway, using electricity as a. motive power, by the system of overhead trolley. At the intersection of Borden and Vernon avenues, in the borough of Queens, a branch line of defendant’s railroad turns from the former into the latter thoroughfare, and the support of the four trolley wires, one over each track at this point, requires a number of poles and supporting guy wires. These, in addition to the four main trolley wires, comprise what some of the witnesses term “ a network of wires.” On the 26th of June, 1902, in crossing a certain part of the intersection of. these two streets the plaintiff Kate Clancy was injured by the fall of a number of these wires, variously estimated by the witnesses at from two to several. At least two of them were the main trolley wires, and their fall, coming in contact as they did with the ground and with .the rails, caused circuits of electricity to be completed. It is not clear whether Mrs. Clancy was injured by physical contact with the wire as it fell, or by one of these currents; nor is it material, for under the cases the defendant is liable in either event. (O’Flaherty v. Nassau Electric R. R. Co., 34 App. Div. 74.) Not content to rest their case upon the proof of these facts, the plaintiffs undertook to show what caused the wires to fall. A flat work car was pro
To sustain the judgment it is contended that the slipping of the trolley pole off the trolley wire, and the striking of that pole against the cross wires, is sufficient explanation, and the court is urged to take judicial notice of the fact that the slipping of trolley poles from trolley wires is a matter of hourly occurrence in the operation of street surface railways. We do not undertake to say that the court will take judicial notice of that fact, but upon respondent’s solicitation we are willing to consider it in the disposition of this appeal, and think that the fact completes the chain of circumstances so that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is, if possible, more truly applicable. If it is a fact that trolley poles slip off the wires so frequently, then the inference of the defendant’s negligence, even in construction or maintenance, is to be drawn from the fact of several wires falling at the intersection of two lines of street railway, as a result of the mere release of the trolley pole and its coming in contact with two of the
The judgment in each case should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Bartlett, Woodward, Hirsohberg and Jerks, JJ., concurred.
. Judgments reversed and new trials granted, costs to abide the event.