149 N.Y.S. 481 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1914
This action was brought to recover for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff recovered a verdict for $250 based upon the following facts shown by him, which the jury evidently believed, to be true. The plaintiff was engaged, with several others, in the work of paving Manhattan avenue in Brooklyn. He was shoveling sand into a wheelbarrow a few inches from the tracks over which defendant ran its cars. Plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that the sand was piled on one side of the street from the curb to the car track and it was his duty to wheel this sand to the other men engaged in paving the street. When the plaintiff took the wheelbarrow over to the sand pile, he looked to see if a car was coming and saw none; when he had gotten the barrow half full he looked again and saw a car about a block away. While he was continuing to fill the barrow the car came along and knocked him down. He testified that he stood with his side to the car, and his back to the track," in a stooping position, when the car came along, without warning, and hit him. The trial justice charged the jury that “ as a matter of law he was entitled to perform his work in the roadway by reason of the necessity of the performance of his duty as assistant to the paver in the removal of this sand or the carrying of this sand to the paver. But the fact that this plaintiff worked in the roadway in the vicinity of cars which were passing him at various times during the day * * * did not
■ Order reversed, with costs and verdict reinstated.
Present: Seabury, Bijur and Cohalan, JJ.
Order reversed, with costs. .