109 N.Y.S. 419 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
The action was to recover damages for personal injuries on the ground of negligence. The plaintiff was at Warners station on the defendant’s road, and was about to cross over the tracks from the passenger to the freight depot to attend to the shipment of some freight. A freight train passed by on the track nearest the platform; the plaintiff was in some way struck and injured. Ue claimed he was standing on the platform, and was struck by something extending out from a car of the train. The defendant claimed he had left the platform and was attempting to cross the tracks in front of the train and was struck by some part of the engine. If the defendant’s theory of the accident was the true one, there could be no recovery, because there could be no negligence of the defendant or freedom from contributory negligence by plaintiff established. The court so charged the jury. If the plaintiff’s theory was correct, then another question is presented, whether the rule of res ipsa loquitur was applicable to the case. The court0 charged the jury that it was so applicable, and if that charge was erroneous, a reversal of the judgment and order would necessarily result. The defendant claims the finding of the jury that the accident occurred as plaintiff testified to it, which was necessarily involved in the verdict, was contrary to the evidence. After reading such evidence and the judge’s charge on this subject, which very fully and fairly presented the question to the jury, I think this court should not disturb the verdict for this reason. As to the question of res ipsa loquitur, there is no evidence to show what it was that extended from a car of the train and struck the plaintiff. It could not have been anything rigid, because it would then have
The case of Griffen v. Manice was an action for a death caused •by the fall of an elevator in one of the tall buildings in Bew York city. The evidence showed that the elevator descended with unusual rapidity, and instead of stopping at the lower floor, continued until it struck the bumpers at the bottom of the shaft with such force as to rebound eighteen inches. Almost immediately the counterbalance weights, which move in a reverse direction from that of the car, consisting of pieces of iron, each from forty to sixty pounds in weight, fell down the shaft, broke through the top of the car, and plaintiff’s intestate was killed thereby. The trial court charged the jury, among other things, that they might infer negligence of the defendant which caused the death from the accident alone, that is, from the evidence given with reference to it. This was held by the Court of Appeals to be correct. The court quotes with approval, from section 59, in Shearman & Bedfield on Begligence,
The court also quotes with approval from Benedick v. Potts (88 Md. 55) as follows: “ In no instance can the bare fact that an injury has happened, of itself and divorced from all the surrounding circumstances, justify the inference that the injury was caused by negligence. It is true that direct proof of negligence is not necessary. Like any other fact, negligence may be established by the proof of circumstances from which its existence may be inferred. * * *
This phrase (res ipsa loquitur), which literally translated means that ‘ the thing speaks for itself,’ is merely a short way of saying that the circumstances attendant upon an accident are themselves of such a character as to justify a jury in inferring negligence as the cause of that accident.”
The court further recognizes the consideration that where the management and control of the thing which has produced the injury is exclusively vested in the defendant, it is within his power to produce evidence of the actual cause that produced the accident, which the plaintiff is unable to present, and refers to Breen v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (109 N. Y. 297), where the plaintiff, sitting by the window of one of defendant’s cars, was struck and injured by a swinging door on a passing freight car, and quotes from the opinion in that case, viz.: “ There must be reasonable evidence of negligence, but when the thing causing the injury is shown to be under the control of a defendant, and the accident is such as, in the ordinary course of business, does not happen if reasonable care is used, it does
I have very carefully analyzed this case of Griffen v. Manice in order to determine just what rules the court laid down and was controlled by, because in the subsequent case (Duhme v. HamburgAmerican Packet Co.) there was no attempt to change these rules. They were approved and applied to the facts of the latter case. The plaintiff, a boy nine years of age, with his mother was upon defendant’s pier, expecting a relative to arrive on a steamship. They were standing at an opening of the pier shed or building, which was guarded by a rope drawn across. While the steamship, on arriving, was being warped alongside the pier, a wire rope or hawser, which ran from the steamship to a mooring post on the pier, parted and in the recoil the plaintiff was struck violently in the face. The wire rope itself did not break, but the shackle, as it is termed, which fastened an end of the rope, brought around upon it so as to form a loop, gave way. The allegation of negligence was in the improper management of the pier and of the steamship and not any defect in the rope or hawser. The plaintiff merely proved the accident and the occurrences at the time. The defendant showed the absence of defects in the rope and hawser, but furnished no explanation of the parting of the same. There was a nonsuit at the trial. The Appellate Division reversed on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, holding that in the absence of explanation by the defendant the jury might infer negligence from the circumstances appearing in
The court in the trial of the present case correctly interpreted these rules, and left it to the jury to say whether in their judgment, in view of all the evidence and circumstances, the defendant was negligent. This, of course, involved the decision. by the court that there was sufficient evidence, if credited by the jury, to authorize the inference, and that is practically the only question here involved.
The jury certainly might infer that there was something hanging, swinging out from defendant’s train sufficiently long to reach the plaintiff where he stood six or eight feet from the side of the train, and that this was a dangerous thing and would not be found in a train run in the ordinary course of business. The train was running under the care and management of the defendant, and the defendant had a better opportunity to know or ascertain what this swinging object was and how it came to be so than the plaintiff. If it was there, and the jury have found it was, the defendant could, after the accident, at least have found out about it and have given some explanation thereof consistent with the absence of negligence on its part, if any such explanation was possible. It gave none whatever but contented itself with denying the claim that there was any such swinging object on the train.
I incline to the view that the question of defendant’s negligence
All concurred, except McLennan, P. J., and Kruse, J., who dissented-.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
4th ed.— [Rep.
See 107 App. Div. 887.— [Rep.