34 N.Y.S. 283 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The purpose of the action was to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff and alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the commissioner of highways of the defendant. They resulted from the breaking of the middle beam of a bridge over which the plaintiff was passing with a steam traction engine on the 1st day of September, 1885. The bridge constituted part of the highway on the line between the defendant, in the county of Chautauqua, and the town of Conewango, in Cattaraugus county, and the center of the bridge was such line. Upon that fact it is contended that this action is not maintainable against the defendant, because (1) it does not come within the statute which permits an action against a town, and (2) that the liability of the defendant is joint, only, with that.of the town of Oonewango.
The right of action against a town for the negligence of its commissioner of highways is dependent upon the statute which provides
Upon the subject of the maintenance of a bridge at the joint expense of two towns, the statute provides that it shall be lawful for the commissioners of either of them, the other refusing to act, to enter into joint contract, which may be enforced against them jointly or severally (Laws 1857, c. 383, § 2), and that if the commissioner of either town shall not within 20 days after written notice from the commissioner of the other, or within a reasonable time thereafter, consent in writing to repair the bridge, the commissioner giving the notice may proceed to make the repair and maintain an action to recover the share of the expense chargeable to the town represented by. the commissioner so served with notice (Id. § 3).
It may be assumed that the commissioner of highways of the defendant was. not required alone to expend money to repair the bridge, until he had taken some steps to have the commissioner of the town of Conewango join with him in doing it, or to charge ¡¡the latter town with liability to contribute to. the expense of the 1 reparation. In view of such provisions of "the statute, it is urged
The evidence tends to prove that the needle beam which gave way was then so decayed as to render the bridge dangerous for ordinary travel upon it. The main question of fact litigated upon the trial was whether the defendant’s highway commissioner then in office was chargeable with negligence in the matter. He was elected in February before, and had been such commissioner nearly seven months. The highways in the town aggregate about 100 miles in length, and the bridges about 40 in number, of which that in question is probably the longest Its length was 52 feet. The floor of the bridge was laid on joists resting on needle beam's, of which there were three, and the abutments at either end of the bridge. The needle beams were sustained by means of iron rods supported by trusses at the sides of the structure. By the breaking of the middle needle beam the ends of the joists resting upon it and the plank necessarily went down, and with them the engine, with the plaintiff upon it. The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove that the needle beam, by the process of decay, had become somewhat rotten as early as 1883, which was observable by inspection from beneath the bridge, and that at the time of the accident there remained only about an inch and a half of the diameter of the needle beam sound, and that was in the center of it This was a beech stick eight inches square. The bridge was built in July, 1879, and it was the judgment of some of the witnesses that beech timber might be expected to continue sound for from