Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, entered December 29, 1972, as to defendant-appellant Tidewater reversed on the law, and complaint dismissed, without costs, and as to defendant-appellant Casey reversed, on the law, the facts, and in the interest of justice, the action against defendant Casey severed, and remanded for a new trial, without costs. The then eight-year-old plaintiff-respondent was struck by Casey’s ear as she came out from the sidewalk to cross a one-way street; her version, corroborated by seven witnesses, one a brother-in-law and the others neighbors and playmates, was that she proceeded around the front of a double-parked Tidewater Oil truck, which obscured her vision, into the street. There was no other theory advanced to connect the truck’s presence, assuming it was there, with the happening of the accident. Both Tidewater and Casey denied the truck’s presence, as did Maloney, the only police-blotter witness. The child was never seen by Casey until her emergence into the street itself and thus his vision would not have been obstructed any more than by an auto parked directly at the curb. Nor would such a truck have interfered with the child’s ability to care for herself for she would have been protected from danger until emergence into the street, and would, in any event, have been expected in the exercise of ordinary care—even for an eight year old—to have stopped and looked before proceeding into the street proper. No one said that the truck was struck or otherwise involved in the actual blow to the child. The sidewalk was not obstructed, and the child’s crossing was at midblock. Thus this case is distinguishable from Mullen v. Fayette (274 App. Div. 527, affd. 300 N. Y. 501) and Petru v. Hertz Corp. (36 A D 2d 704). We hold that the truck, if there, did not contribute to the accident to the child. If we did not dismiss on the law as to Tidewater, we would remand for retrial as against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Casey’s car was not moved from the scene before the police arrived; the first officer to arrive saw it and the skid marks leading to it, and promptly set his radio car athwart the approach to protect the scene. The investigating detective found it so on arrival, and made a field diagram with careful measurements, later transcribed onto a more formal diagram. Not all measurements were copied from one to the other, but those that were are identical with the field diagram. There was no evidence to contradict these measurements except the statement of the brother-in-law that Casey’s tracks were in midstreet. The measurements indicate clearly that the distances from the curb of the curbside wheels of the Casey car were: front, 15 feet; rear, 13 feet. Assuming even a compact car to have been parked at the curb and accepting the truck’s width as eight feet, and making no allowance for space between the parked vehicle and the curb, and between the truck and the parked vehicle, the closest free space in the street could not have been less than 14 feet out from the curb. Assuming all these factors, some of which actually defy assumption,
