99 A.D. 175 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
Lead Opinion
It appears that one Henry Corn was the owner of certain property upon the northwest corner of Eighteenth street and Fifth avenue, in the city of New York ; that he made a contract with the defendant Cowen to erect a building upon said property; that Cowen made a sub-contract with the defendants Miller and Holme to provide the materials and perform the labor for the necessary shoring, sheath piling and construction of a temporary bridge or sidewalk for use during the construction of the building; that Corn, the owner of the property, applied to the commissioner of public works of the city of New York for a license to construct a vault extending into Fifth avenue, and obtained such permit or license upon payment to the city of the sum of §5,886, and that this license contained a permit which authorized Corn to erect a bridge, not to exceed five feet in height above the sidewalk, and extending no greater distance than the length of the excavation for the vault authorized by the permit. There is no question but that this permit was valid and authorized by the charter and ordinances of the city of New York.
Corn made the contract with the defendant Cowen for the erection of the building, which included the erection of the necessary bridge over the sidewalk during the construction of the vault. Cowen made a sub-contract with the defendants Miller and Holme, by which Miller and Holme undertook to provide all the materials and perform all the work mentioned.in the specifications annexed to
On that day there was a parade up Fifth avenue. A large number of people were upon this bridge while the parade was passing, when a portion of the bridge suddenly collapsed, throwing a number of the people that were on it into the excavation. A police officer who was on duty on this bridge testified that he went down when the bridge gave way into the excavation; that he fell towards Sixth avenue, landing about twelve or fourteen feet west of where he was standing before the bridge fell; that he fell upon a large beam and that he noticed under it the body of a man; that he with others took up the beam and took up the body of this man, whose head had been crushed by the beam; that the man was then dead ; that just before the accident the witness, who was standing on the bridge, felt the bridge shake; that the officers had been warned to keep the people moving or the bridge might fall into the cellar, and they were doing the best they could to keep the bridge from being crowded; that just before this accident there was a large number of people who had come from department stores on Sixth avenue; that these people added to those in the street caused many more people on the bridge than before, and it was when the increased number of people came that the officer first noticed that the bridge was shaking.
This bridge was constructed of timber under the immediate direction of the defendant Miller, who had been engaged in the construction of bridges of this kind for about thirty years. There was evidence tending to show that when a good many people were passing over the bridge there was a lateral swaying; that there were no side supports to the three upright beams upon which the crosspieces
At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony the complaint as to the defendant Cowen was dismissed by consent of the plaintiff, whereupon the defendants The City of New York and Miller and Holme severally moved to dismiss the complaint. The motions were denied and the defendants excepted. On the part of the defendants there was evidence as to the construction of the bridge and the braces to prevent lateral motion. The defendant Miller, under whose direction the bridge was constructed, was an expert bridge builder, having been engaged in work of this kind for upwards of thirty years. Competent foremen were employed, who had also been engaged in work of this kind for many years. There was also evidence that on the morning of the accident a builder was requested to inspect the bridge. He made an examination and testified that he found the bridge in fair condition for that purpose; that he was present when the bridge collapsed ; that immediately before the collapse of the bridge he saw it begin to sway and immediately after came the crash. This witness testified that he had been in the building business twenty-five years, and the braces he had described which were employed in strengthening this bridge were sufficient to make a strong substantial structure. It was alsd proved that before the crowd gathered on Fifth avenue to see the parade, some of the defendants erected barricades across the approaches to this bridge to prevent its being used, but that subsequently they were torn away and the bridge was crowded with people constantly moving under the direction of the police.
Upon this record there are two questions presented, which are based upon substantially different legal propositions. The first is whether there is evidence to justify a finding that the city is liable, and the second as to whether the contractors who built the bridge are liable. I do not think that it can be fairly said that there is any evidence to sustain a finding that this bridge was unsafe for the ordinary street use of Fifth avenue in this locality. The evidence is undisputed that it was used for upwards of two weeks prior to the accident, and subsequently was reconstructed in the same way as originally constructed, and continued in use until the building was completed. The conditions that existed on the day of the accident were most unusual. In consequence of a parade large crowds had assembled on the avenue along the line of parade, which crowds were largely augmented by the closing of the department stores in the vicinity just prior to the collapse. They gathered upon this bridge, and it was undoubtedly because of the extraordi
What were the police to do when this question was presented ? They had no facilities for strengthening the bridge, and the evidence is undisputed that they at once took measures to warn the persons in charge of the bridge of the condition. Such warning was given, and the public officials had a right to infer that reasonable means would be taken by those responsible for the bridge to prevent an accident. The police officers recognized the danger from overcrowding the bridge. They took such means as appeared to them proper to avert that danger. Police officers were placed in charge of the bridge to prevent people from gathering and standing on it, and they did all that they could do except to strengthen the bridge, for which they had no facilities and which it would be most unjust to require them to do on such short notice. The city is responsible for a failure to take such means as were available at the time to keep this street in a safe condition; but there is nothing to show that such an unusual crowd could have been anticipated or that the city could have done any more than it did to prevent the accident. The expert testimony offered by the defendants is at least sufficient to show that competent bridge builders considered this bridge, constructed as it was, a safe and
The next question presented is as to the liability of Miller and Holme, but it is quite evident that their obligation to those lawfully using the street was quite distinct from that of the city of New York. They had undertaken to construct a temporary bridge over an excavation in a part of the public street. In the construction of such a temporary bridge it was their duty to so construct it that those lawfully using the street should be reasonably free from danger. “ It is not to be expected, and cannot be required, that the temporary covering shall equal in safety and convenience the sidewalk removed, or that passengers may cross with as little heed and care as upon the completed pavement. * * * But if the builder opens his covering to the passage of the public, although only as a temporary substitute, he must be deemed to declare it safe and free from peril to persons crossing with such ordinary prudence and care as the presence of the temporary structure requires, and so he must build it with so much of care and skill and prudence as will reasonably protect the passers from peril, and enable them with some ordinary attention to their steps to pass it with safety.” (Nolan v. King, 97 N. Y. 565.) Applying this rule, I think, upon the evidence in this case, the question of the negligence of the defendants Miller and Holme was for the jury. They constructed this bridge in a public .
It is also claimed by the defendants that there was no evidence to show that the plaintiff’s intestate was a traveler upon the street, or that he was on the bridge at the time it collapsed. I think that there was evidence from which the jury could infer that the plaintiff’s intestate was upon this bridge and was carried down by it. A policeman who was on the bridge at the time, and who was carried down with it and injured, testified that he was on the bridge from half-past one until the time it fell; that ho looked down in the excavation underneath the bridge several times and did not at any time see any one beneath the bridge, to the west of the bridge, or at any place in the excavation; that he looked several times, but saw no one in the excavation. Officer Howard, a detective sergeant, testified that at the time the bridge fell there were 250 or 300 people on it; that about 50 went down into the excavation ; that at the time of the collapse he was right back of the plaintiff’s intestate and the witness fell into the excavation ; that he helped another officer carry the plaintiff’s intestate on a stretcher to an office building in Eighteenth street; that the plaintiff’s intestate was found in the excavation under one of the large timbers with which the bridge was constructed. Upon this evidence the jury were justified in finding that the plaintiff’s intestate was upon the bridge and fell with it when it collapsed. The jury were certainly justified in finding that the deceased was free from contributory negligence if
There are several exceptions to rulings upon questions of evidence which are relied on by the appellants. The plaintiff produced what purported to be a model of this bridge, and called a witness who testified that he had constructed the model and as to its construction. This model represented three uprights, upon which rested three needles supporting the stringers, upon which was the platform of the bridge. Another witness was called, and testified that this model was a correct representation, to the best of his recollection, of the general construction work of the bridge at the time he saw it, which was before the collapse. Subsequently there was evidence tending to show that there were four uprights upon which rested needles instead of three as shown by the model, and the evidence introduced by the plaintiff tended to show that the cause of the collapse was a lack of bracing, as it was conceded that the timber was proper for the purposes for which it was used, and none of the timber was broken. There was other evidence as to the construction of the bridge which it appears established that the model was a substantial reproduction of the bridge, with the exception of the number of uprights, and under those circumstances I do not think it was error for the court to admit the model in evidence or to refuse to strike it out upon the motion of the defendants. There was evidence, at any rate, tending to show that this model was a correct representation of the bridge before the collapse, and so far as that evidence was contradicted by the defendants, the question was for the jury.
The defendants also claim that the verdict was excessive. It was for $22,000. The deceased was thirty-seven years of age, had a wife (the plaintiff) and four children, the oldest about four and a half years of age and the youngest three and a half months at the time of his death. One of these children has died since the trial. There is no definite evidence as to the amount the deceased earned.
I am inclined to think that this verdict is excessive. There is no evidence that the deceased had been able to save anything. His contribution for the support of his family was from twenty to twenty-five dollars a week. Twenty-five dollars per week would make one thousand three hundred dollars a year. The jury could only award for the pecuniary injury sustained by the widow and next of kin in consequence of the death of the decedent. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1904.) The income from this award would produce almost as much as the deceased contributed to the support of his family; and assuming that the deceased would have lived thirty years, the amount awarded is much in excess of that which would be required to produce such an income as the deceased had contributed to the support of his family during that period. Under the circumstances I am inclined to think that we would not be justified in sustaining a verdict for more than $15,000.
Our conclusion is that the judgment and order appealed from as against the city of New York must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event; and that the judgment against the defendants Miller and Holme, and the order denying new trial as to them, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellants to abide the event, unless the plaintiff stipulates to reduce the judgment as entered, including interest, costs and allowance, to the sum of $17,167.11; and upon so stipulating, the judgment and order are affirmed, without costs.
Patterson and Hatch, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented on the ground that the judgments should be reversed; Laughlin, J., dissented in part.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the modification of the judgment, but dissent from the reversal of judgment as to the city.
Judgment and order as against the city of New York reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event; and judgment
Sic.