255 A.D. 1004 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1938
In an action to recover for personal injuries the plaintiff, a floorman in a public garage, was cleaning, or about to clean, the left running board of appellant’s automobile while the motor was running. It is claimed that, without warning, the car was started and plaintiff was struck by the door handle of the car and thrown against the side of a nearby standing automobile. Judgment entered on the verdict of a jury in favor of plaintiff reversed on the law and the facts, and a new trial granted, costs to appellant to abide the event. The charge of the learned trial justice did not adequately inform the jury as to the nature of the negligence with which appellant was charged. The general law of negligence was correctly stated, but the jury was given no information as to the precise issue of fact that it was to determine. The request to charge (reported at fols. 872-873 of the record) was, in our opinion, not a request to charge which of the facts had been established, but was a request to state how the law should be applied to the evidence. In view of plaintiff’s testimony that